Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T20:56:25.269Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Explaining Equalization

Political Institutions, Market Forces, and Reduction of the Gender Wage Gap in Sweden, 1920–95

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Abstract

This article describes and explains the movement of female relative wages in Sweden from 1920 to 1995. During this period the aggregate gender wage gap shrunk from 41 to 15%. The bulk of the change took place in two periods: 1920 to 1940 and 1960 to 1980. With regard to determining factors, the analysis distinguishes between the period before 1960, when the rise in the female relative wage was the result of employment shifts, and after 1960, when wage structure change was the prime determinant. In the interwar period, women moved from low-paid to better-paid jobs, notably in trade and commerce and public services, as legal and administrative reforms opened up the public sector to women and educational reforms raised the educational level of the female labor force. The most rapid change in the gender wage gap occurred at a time when the solidaristic wage policy doctrine was embraced by the blue-collar trade unions and formed the basis of claims in wage negotiations. This study suggests, however, that excess demand for female labor rather than egalitarian ambitions of strong trade unions was the decisive factor behind the rapid reduction of the gender gap. Likewise, supply and demand shifts may well explain why the female relative wage stagnated from the late 1970s. These observations add up to the somewhat unorthodox conclusion that institutions were of primary importance for female relative wage development in the interwar period, while market forces played the leading role after 1960.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 2003 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Björklund, A., Edin, P.-A., Holmlund, B., and Wadensjö, E. (1996) Arbetsmarknaden. Stockholm: SNS.Google Scholar
Blau, F., and Kahn, L. (2000) “Gender differences in pay.” NBER Working Paper No. 7732. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
Florin, C. (1987) “Kampen om katedern.” Diss., University of Umeå.Google Scholar
Frangeur, R. (1998) Yrkeskvinna eller makens tjänarinna? Striden om yrkesrätten för gifta kvinnor i mellankrigstidens Sverige. Lund: Arkiv.Google Scholar
Goldin, C. (1990) Understanding the Gender Gap: An Economic History of American Women. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Goldin, C., and Katz, L. F. (1998) “The origins of technology-skill complementarity.Quarterly Journal of Economics 113: 693–732.Google Scholar
Gustafsson, S., and Lantz, P. (1985) Arbete och löner: Ekonomiska teorier kring skillnader mellan kvinnor och män. Stockholm: IUI, Arbetslivscentrum.Google Scholar
Hibbs, D. A. (1990) “Wage compression under solidarity wage bargaining in Sweden.” FIEF Economic Research Report No. 30. Stockholm: Trade Union Institute for Economic Research.Google Scholar
Jonsson, L., and Siven, C.-H. (1986) Varför löneskillnader? Stockholm: SAF.Google Scholar
Katz, L., and Murphy, K. (1992) “Changes in relative wages, 1963–1987: Supply and demand factors.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 107: 35–78.Google Scholar
Landsorganisationen (LO) (1986) De centralaö verenskommelserna mellan LO och SAF 1952–1987. Stockholm: LO.Google Scholar
Lärarelönenämnden (1914) Huvudbetänkande (Parliamentary Commission on Teachers’ Wages). Stockholm: P. A. Norstedt & söner.Google Scholar
Löfström, Å. (1989) Diskriminering på svensk arbetsmarknad: En ananlys av löneskillnader mellan kvinnor och män. Umeå Economic Studies No. 196. Umeå: University of Umeå.Google Scholar
Löfström, Å., and Gustafsson, S. (1991) “Policy changes and women’s wages in Sweden,” in Willborn, S. L. (ed.) Women’s Wages: Stability and Changes in Six Industrialized Countries. London: JAI.Google Scholar
Mincer, J. (1962) “Labor force participation of married women,” in Lewis, H. G. (ed.) Aspects of Labor Economics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ohlsson, R. (1986) Högre utbildning och demografisk förändring. Lund: Ekonomisk-historisk föreningen.Google Scholar
Schön, L. (1998) “Industrial crises in a model of long cycles: Sweden in an international perspective,” in Myllintaus, T. (ed.) Crisis and Restructuring in Small Countries. Berlin: Scripta Meracaturae.Google Scholar
Schön, L. (2000) En modern svensk ekonomisk historia. Stockholm: SNS.Google Scholar
Socialstyrelsen (1913–27) Sociala meddelanden [Social reports]. Stockholm: Socialstyrelsen.Google Scholar
Socialstyrelsen (1928–51) Lönestatistisk Årsbok [Statistical yearbook of wages]. Stockholm: Socialstyrelsen.Google Scholar
Socialstyrelsen (1936) Arbetsförhållandena inom det husliga arbetets område [Working conditions in household work]. Stockholm: Socialstyrelsen.Google Scholar
Socialstyrelsen (1952–60) SOS Löner [Official statistics of Sweden, wages]. Stockholm: Statistiska centralbyrån.Google Scholar
Socialstyrelsen (1961–95) SOS Löner [Official statistics of Sweden, wages]. Stockholm: Statistiska centralbyrån.Google Scholar
Statens Offentliga Utredningar (1938) Betänkande över gift kvinnas förvärvsarbete m. m., avgivet av Kvinnoarbetskommittén. Report no. 47. Stockholm: Finansdepartementet.Google Scholar
Statistiska centralbyrån (1920) Folkräkningen 1920 [Census of the population 1920]. Stockholm: P. A.Norstedt & söner.Google Scholar
Statistiska centralbyrån (1940) Folkräkningen 1940 [Census of the population 1940]. Stockholm: P. A.Norstedt & söner Google Scholar
Statistiska centralbyrån (1960) Folkräkningen 1960 [Census of the population 1960]. Stockholm: P. A.Norstedt & söner.Google Scholar
Statistiska centralbyrån (1980) Folkoch bostadsräkningen 1980 [Population and housing census 1980]. Stockholm: Statistiska centralbyrån.Google Scholar
Statistiska centralbyrån (1990) Folkoch bostadsräkningen 1990 [Population and housing census 1990]. Stockholm: Statistiska centralbyrån.Google Scholar
Svensson, L. (1995a) Closing the Gender Gap: Determinants of Change in the Female-to-Male Wage Ratio in Swedish Manufacturing, 1913–1990. Lund: Ekonomisk-historiska föreningen.Google Scholar
Svensson, L. (1995b) “Politik för jämställdhet? Offentlig sektors betydelse för kvinnors ställning på svensk arbetsmarknad.” Socialvetenskaplig Tidskrift 2: 249–64.Google Scholar
Svensson, L. (2000) “Industrial dynamics, labor demand, and wage differentials in the Swedish manufacturing industry 1930–1990. ”Paper presented at the workshop Technical Change, Economic Growth, and Convergence in Europe, Mölle, 22-24 September.Google Scholar
Svensson, L. (n.d.) Work tables prepared for the project “Wage policy, wage structure, and economic transformation in Sweden, 1890–1990.” Department of Economic History, Lund University.Google Scholar
TCO (Swedish Central Organization of Salaried Employees) (1982) Lönepolitikens samhällsekonomiska förutsättningar. Debattskrift från TCOs utredningsavdelning. Stockholm: TCO.Google Scholar