PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Women eager to negotiate salaries, when given the opportunity

2012-11-15
(Press-News.org) Although some scholars have suggested that the income gap between men and women is due to women's reluctance to negotiate salaries, a new study at the University of Chicago shows that given an invitation, women are just as willing as men to negotiate for more pay.

Men, however, are more likely than women to ask for more money when there is no explicit statement in a job description that wages are negotiable, the study showed.

"We find that simple manipulations of the contract environment can significantly shift the gender composition of the applicant pool," said UChicago economist John List, the Homer J. Livingston Professor in Economics.

List was a co-author of a paper based on a study of people responding to job advertisements in which salaries were either advertised as negotiable or fixed. Women were three times more likely to apply for jobs with negotiable salaries and to pursue negotiations once they applied, the study found.

Among those responding to an explicit salary offer, 8 percent of women and 11 percent of men initiated salary negotiations. When the salary was described as negotiable, 24 percent of women and 22 percent of men stated salary discussions.

"By merely adding the information that the wage is 'negotiable,' we successfully reduced the gender gap in applications by approximately 45 percent," said List. Previous studies have shown that men are nine times more likely than women to ask for more money when applying for a job, but this paper is the first to use a field experiment to look at gender differences in the way men and women approach salary negotiations.

List, a leading scholar of using field experiments to study important economic issues, conducted the study with Andreas Leibbrandt, a senior lecturer at Monash University in Australia and a former postdoctoral fellow in UChicago's Department of Economics. The two presented their findings in "Do Women Avoid Salary Negotiations? Evidence from a Large Scale Natural Field Experiment," published by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Researchers placed 18 online job ads for administrative assistants in nine major metropolitan areas in the United States from November 2011 through February 2012. The jobs were either for a gender-neutral position in fundraising or for positions in a sports environment—a situation that prompted more male applicants. They offered jobs to applicants, and eventually 10 people were hired. After posting the jobs, they received interest from 2,422 people and were able to determine the gender of 2,382 by referring to references that sort first names according to gender. Two-thirds of the job seekers were women.

After expressing an interest in the jobs, applicants were randomly told that the jobs paid $17.60 hourly, or that the salaries were negotiable. Job-related conversations were conducted via email.

The study found that when men determined that salary was fixed, their probability of applying was 47 percent, compared with 32 percent for women. When salary was negotiable, the probability of women applying increased to 33 percent, whereas men's probability decreased to 42 percent.

Despite efforts to promote gender equality, women make about three-fourths as much as men, surveys have shown. Additionally, women hold only 2.5 percent of the highest paid jobs in American firms. The gap in wages begins when a person is hired, so encouraging negotiations from the beginning is likely to have a long-term impact on salary, List said.

A variety of factors may explain the gender differences in salary, including negotiations after a person is hired and differences in women's willingness to negotiate for jobs other than the ones advertised, the paper concluded.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study shows different approach after progression in non-small cell lung cancer patients

2012-11-15
DENVER – Right now, the best known treatment for patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with anaplastic lymphoma kinase gene rearrangements (ALK) or epidermal growth factor receptor mutations (EGFR) is crizotinib or EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), such as erlotinib, respectively. However, progression inevitably occurs. When it does, having no clear guidelines and/or indications, most patients are treated with chemotherapy. A new study published in the December 2012 issue of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer's (IASLC) ...

Study reveals insights that could aid in therapeutic use of mesenchymal stem cells

2012-11-15
BOSTON – Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), are a newly emerging cellular therapy being tested in approximately 250 clinical trials worldwide to help repair damaged tissues, such as injured heart muscle following a heart attack. The problem is that when culture-expanded MSCs are injected into the circulation, they have trouble gaining access to the inflamed tissues—exactly where their help is needed. Now, research led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) reveals new insights into how MSCs "traffic" from the ...

Youth with autism gravitate toward STEM majors in college -- if they get there

2012-11-15
It's a popularly held belief that individuals with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) gravitate toward STEM majors in college (science, technology, engineering mathematics). A new study, co-authored by Paul Shattuck, PhD, assistant professor at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis, confirms that view yet finds that young adults with an ASD also have one of the lowest overall college enrollment rates. The study, "STEM Participation Among College Students with an Autism Spectrum Disorder," was published online Nov. 1 in the Journal of Autism and Developmental ...

Human umbilical cord blood cell co-culture supports embryonic stem cell expansion

2012-11-15
Putnam Valley, NY. (Nov. 15, 2012) – Researchers in Taiwan have developed a "safe, feasible and robust co-culture system" supplied by human umbilical cord mensenchymal stem cells (HUCMSCs) to feed the sustained culture used for human embryonic stem cell (hESC) expansion prior to cell transplantation. The co-culture, said the researchers, "appears to eliminate the most feared characteristic of transplanted hESCs," which is their propensity to form tumors. The study, published in the current issue of CELL TRANSPLANTATION, is now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/. ...

These bots were made for walking: Cells power biological machines

These bots were made for walking: Cells power biological machines
2012-11-15
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — They're soft, biocompatible, about 7 millimeters long – and, incredibly, able to walk by themselves. Miniature "bio-bots" developed at the University of Illinois are making tracks in synthetic biology. Designing non-electronic biological machines has been a riddle that scientists at the interface of biology and engineering have struggled to solve. The walking bio-bots demonstrate the Illinois team's ability to forward-engineer functional machines using only hydrogel, heart cells and a 3-D printer. With an altered design, the bio-bots could be customized ...

USA's ancient hurricane belt and the US-Canada equator

USAs ancient hurricane belt and the US-Canada equator
2012-11-15
The recent storms that have battered settlements on the east coast of America may have been much more frequent in the region 450 million years ago, according to scientists. New research pinpointing the positions of the Equator and the landmasses of the USA, Canada and Greenland, during the Ordovician Period 450 million years ago, indicates that the equator ran down the western side of North America with a hurricane belt to the east. The hurricane belt would have affected an area covering modern day New York State, New Jersey and most of the eastern seaboard of the ...

Studies in Cell Transplantation investigate oxygen's impact as a factor in transplantation

2012-11-15
Putnam Valley, NY. (Nov. 15, 2012) – Two studies published in the current issue of Cell Transplantation (21:7), now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/, investigate the role of oxygen in cell transplantation. In a study carried out at Baylor University, researchers concerned about the poor efficacy of islet cell transplantation during pancreas preservation and islet isolation have found that low temperatures can prevent hypoxia (low oxygen) that can damage islet cells. In a second study, Brazilian researchers found that neural cells ...

Traumatic brain injury patients, supercomputer simulations studied to improve helmets

Traumatic brain injury patients, supercomputer simulations studied to improve helmets
2012-11-15
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories and the University of New Mexico are comparing supercomputer simulations of blast waves on the brain with clinical studies of veterans suffering from mild traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) to help improve helmet designs. Paul Taylor and John Ludwigsen of Sandia's Terminal Ballistics Technology Department and Corey Ford, a neurologist at UNM's Health Sciences Center, are in the final year of a four-year study of mild TBI funded by the Office of Naval Research. The team hopes to identify threshold levels of ...

Bug repellent for supercomputers proves effective

2012-11-15
Livermore, Calif. -- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) researchers have used the Stack Trace Analysis Tool (STAT), a highly scalable, lightweight tool to debug a program running more than one million MPI processes on the IBM Blue Gene/Q (BGQ)-based Sequoia supercomputer. The debugging tool is a significant milestone in LLNL's multi-year collaboration with the University of Wisconsin (UW), Madison and the University of New Mexico (UNM) to ensure supercomputers run more efficiently. Playing a significant role in scaling up the Sequoia supercomputer, STAT, ...

Study: Job autonomy, trust in leadership keys to improvement initiatives

Study: Job autonomy, trust in leadership keys to improvement initiatives
2012-11-15
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Frontline employees will commit to improving their organization if they perceive a high degree of autonomy in their jobs and trust their leaders, says research from University of Illinois business professors. According to a soon-to-be-published study by Gopesh Anand and Dilip Chhajed, professors of business administration at Illinois, a flexible work environment plays a significant role in increasing employee commitment to continuous improvement initiatives. "Continuous improvement initiatives are typically bundled with employee empowerment techniques," ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Leader in mission-driven open publishing wins APE Award for Innovation in Scholarly Communication

Innovative 6D pose dataset sets new standard for robotic grasping performance

Evaluation of plasma neurodegenerative biomarkers for diagnosing minimal hepatic encephalopathy and predicting overt hepatic encephalopathy in Chinese patients with hepatic cirrhosis

MEXICO: How animals, people, and rituals created Teotihuacán

The role of political partisanship and moral beliefs in leadership selection

Parental favoritism isn't a myth

Arctic hotspots study reveals areas of climate stress in Northern Alaska, Siberia

Mount Sinai study finds wearable devices can detect and predict inflammatory bowel disease flare-ups

Peripheral blood CD4+/CD8+ t cell ratio predicts HBsAg clearance in inactive HBsAg carriers treated with peginterferon alpha

MIT Press’s Direct to Open reaches annual funding goal for 2025, opens access to 80 new monographs

New NCCN patient resource shares latest understanding of genetic testing to guide patient decision making

Synchronization in neural nets: Mathematical insight into neuron readout drives significant improvements in prediction accuracy

TLE6 identified as a protein associated with infertility in male mice

Thin lenses have a bright future

Volcanic eruption caused Neolithic people to sacrifice unique "sun stones"

Drug in clinical trials for breast cancer could also treat some blood cancers

Study identifies mechanism underlying increased osteoarthritis risk in postmenopausal females

The material revolution: How USA’s commodity appetite evolved from 1900 to present

Asteroid impact sulfur release less lethal in dinosaur extinction

Study shows seed impact mills clobber waterhemp seed viability

Study links rising suicidality among teen girls to increase in identifying as LGBQ

Mind’s eye: Pineal gland photoreceptor’s 2 genes help fish detect color

Nipah virus: epidemiology, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention

FDA ban on Red Dye 3 and more are highlighted in Sylvester Cancer's January tip sheet

Mapping gene regulation

Exposure to air pollution before pregnancy linked to higher child body mass index, study finds

Neural partially linear additive model

Dung data: manure can help to improve global maps of herbivore distribution

Concerns over maternity provision for pregnant women in UK prisons

UK needs a national strategy to tackle harms of alcohol, argue experts

[Press-News.org] Women eager to negotiate salaries, when given the opportunity