Size Matters! Body Height and Labor Market Discrimination: A Cross-European Analysis | Munich Center for the Economics of Aging - MEA
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Size Matters! Body Height and Labor Market Discrimination: A Cross-European Analysis

Inhalt Taller workers earn on average higher salaries. Recent research has proposed cognitive abilities and social skills as explanations for the height-wage premium. Another possible mechanism, employer discrimination, has found little support. In this paper, we provide some evidence in favor of the discrimination hypothesis. Using a cross section of 13 countries, we show that there is a consistent height-wage premium across Europe and that it is largely due to ccupational sorting. We show that height has a signi cant e ect for the occupational sorting of employed workers but not for the self-employed. We interpret this result as evidence of employer discrimination in favor of taller workers. Our results are consistent with the heoretical predictions of recent models on statistical discrimination and employer learning. Keywords: Height, Wage Premium, Discrimination, Cognitive Functions, Occupational Sorting
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Francesco Cinnirella Joachim Winter

2009
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