Professor Claudia Goldin: Recipient of the Nobel in Economics for her Work on Gender Inequalities in the Labor Market

2023-10-09 10:03:45
Claudia Goldin, professor of economics at Harvard University, received the “Nobel in Economics” on October 9, 2023. CREATIVE COMMONS

The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, sometimes referred to as “Nobel in economics”was awarded, Monday October 9, to the American Claudia Goldin, professor at Harvard University for her work on gender inequalities in the labor market. Her research focuses on topics such as the female workforce, income inequality, education, and gender pay inequality.

“She discovered the main factors explaining gender differences in the labor market”according to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. “His research reveals the causes of change, as well as the main sources of the remaining gap between men and women. » So, “Women are largely underrepresented in the global labor market and, when they work, they earn less than men”.

Birth of the first child

The winner demonstrated that women’s participation in the labor market has not experienced an upward trend over the past 200 years in the United States, but rather followed a U-shaped curve.

The U-curve by Claudia Goldin. JOHN JARNESTAD/THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Throughout the twentieth century, women’s educational attainment has continued to rise, and in most high-income countries it is now significantly higher than that of men. Claudia Goldin demonstrated that access to the contraceptive pill played an important role in accelerating this change, providing new career opportunities for women in terms of education and professional choices. Historically, much of the gender pay gap in the United States might be explained by differences in education and career choices. But according to his work, most of this difference in income today is between women and men exercising the same profession, and largely occurs at the birth of the first child.

“The Effect of Parenthood” by Claudia Goldin. JOHAN JARNESTAD/THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Like the other Nobels, the prize is endowed with 10 million Swedish crowns (920,000 euros), to be shared among co-winners. Created by the Bank of Sweden, the Economy Prize “in memory of Alfred Nobel” was added in 1969 to the five traditional prizes (medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and peace) more than sixty years following the others, earning it from its detractors the nickname of “false Nobel”.

More information to come

Read also: Why the “Nobel in Economics” is not a Nobel Prize like the others

The World with AFP

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