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Identification, screening and stereotyping in labour market discrimination

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TLDR
In this article, a microeconomic model of hiring and pay decisions by an employer is presented, where the authors integrate both responses in a model of uncertainty in decision-making, leading to less stereotyping of people and hence less discrimination, and social identification with an ingroup, inducing more reliance on stereotypic perceptions and prejudices, and hence more discrimination against an outgroup.
Abstract
According to social-psychological research, feelings of uncertainty in decision-making evoke two opposite responses: (i) reduction of uncertainty by information search, leading to less stereotyping of people, and hence less discrimination; (ii) social identification with an ingroup, inducing more reliance on stereotypic perceptions and prejudices, and hence more discrimination against an outgroup. We integrate both responses in a microeconomic model of hiring and pay decisions by an employer. Increasing competition in the product market makes the employer feel more uncertain about his profits, but also raises the opportunity cost of screening expenditures. This elicits substitution of ingroup identification for screening expenditures, and hence enhances discrimination.

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Does Competition Destroy Ethical Behavior

TL;DR: This paper argued that competition might be good for ethical behavior in the long run, because it promotes growth and raises incomes, and higher incomes raise the willingness to pay for ethical behaviour, but may also change what people believe to be ethical for the better.
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Employers and migration in low‐skilled services in Dublin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the role of employers as "institutional" factors in the creation of segmentation in the labour market, focusing on the sectors of catering, cleaning and security as low-skilled service sector providers.
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Nationalism, cognitive ability, and interpersonal relations

TL;DR: The authors developed a model of how those judgments form based on a theory of symbolic values, which depicts the interaction between two values, one associated with an inherited ethnic trait (nationality) and one with an endogenous achievement trait (income) and found that individuals with lower cognitive ability are predicted to invest more value on nationalism and to have hostile relations with immigrants.
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Welfare to work and subjective well-being: Evidence from a randomized control trial

TL;DR: This article examined the effect of transitioning from welfare to full-time employment on a variety of measures of subjective well-being for a sample of long-term welfare recipients in British Columbia and New Brunswick who participated in the Self-Sufficiency Project (SSP).
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Wage discrimination and antidiscrimination policy in unionized industries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider industries where the equally skilled workers/members of firm-specific monopoly unions can be grouped according to different reservation wages, and they show that, in absence of active antidiscrimination policy, discriminatory wage contracts across groups of employees may emerge, in equilibrium, under either oligopoly or a perfectly competitive product market.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Uncertainty, Hiring, and Subsequent Performance: The NFL Draft

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the impact of uncertainty on the hiring process of NFL football players and show the connection between models of statistical discrimination where uncertainty can work against groups that have less reliable indicators of future productivity and models of option value where uncertainty about future productivity can be beneficial for these groups.
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Dynamics of a household norm in female labour supply

TL;DR: This paper developed a continuous variant of the theory of social custom of Akerlof (Q. J. Econom. 94 (1980) 749) to model the impact of a traditional household norm on married women's labour supply.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the nature of prejudice.

Mark P. Zanna
- 01 Jan 1994 - 
TL;DR: The authors found that stereotypes, symbolic beliefs, emotions, and past experiences are far from redundant, and each factor is, indeed, an important predictor of prejudicial attitudes, and that the relatively more negative attitudes held by individuals high in authoritarianism are predicted best by symbolic beliefs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Racial Discrimination in American Industry

William S. Comanor
- 01 Nov 1973 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that discrimination be measured by a coefficient, which describes the extent to which employers impute to a discriminated class of workers, a wage rate which exceeds their money wage rate.
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