학술논문

Hours Constraints, Occupational Choice, and Gender: Evidence from Medical Residents.
Document Type
Article
Source
Review of Economic Studies. May2023, Vol. 90 Issue 3, p1535-1568. 34p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 8 Graphs.
Subject
*Vocational guidance
*Gender wage gap
*Labor supply
*Women physicians
Residents (Medicine)
Gender
Medical school graduates
Language
ISSN
0034-6527
Abstract
Do the long work hours required by many high-paying professions inhibit the entry of women? I investigate this question by studying a 2003 policy that capped the average workweek for medical residents at 80 hours. Using data on the universe of US medical school graduates, I find that when a specialty reduces its weekly hours, more women enter the specialty, whereas there is little change in men's entry. I provide evidence that the increase in women is due to changes in labour supply, rather than labour demand. At the residency program level, I document that baseline female representation predicts female entry after the reform. A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that the reallocation of women among medical specialties due to the hours reduction can close the physician gender wage gap by 11 |$\%$|⁠. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]