Personal tools
You are here: Home / Publications / Gender differences in determinants of occupational choice in Russia

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Gender differences in determinants of occupational choice in Russia

Klimova, Anastasia. (2012). Gender differences in determinants of occupational choice in Russia. International Journal of Social Economics, 39(9), 648-670.

Klimova, Anastasia. (2012). Gender differences in determinants of occupational choice in Russia. International Journal of Social Economics, 39(9), 648-670.

Octet Stream icon 2126.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1374 bytes)

The purpose of this paper is to analyse determinants of occupational allocation by gender, in Russia, between 1994 and 2001, using the only available nationally representative longitudinal survey (RLMS). Multinomial logit was chosen as the estimation technique for this analysis. It was found that gender significantly affects occupational distribution after controlling for human capital and other characteristics during all years. Educational attainment was significant for professionals and technicians/associate professionals, while work experience was significant for craft and plant workers. Marital status did not affect females' occupational allocation while married males were less likely to be unskilled and craft workers. It appears that women performed primarily non-geographically dependent jobs and the significance of regional variation for females' employment diminished over time. A comparison of the actual and predicted females' occupation distribution revealed a large over-representation of females in unskilled occupations.




JOUR



Klimova, Anastasia



2012


International Journal of Social Economics

39

9

648-670






03068293

10.1108/03068291211245691



2126