Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data

Based on the data from a sample of 4832 from the Chinese General Social Survey in 2018, this study examines the impact of Internet usage on the wage equation for males and females by using the robust least squares regression method, the threshold regression method, and the quantile regression method...

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Main Authors: Jiacheng Gao, Yue Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-01-01
Series:Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/7580041
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author Jiacheng Gao
Yue Liu
author_facet Jiacheng Gao
Yue Liu
author_sort Jiacheng Gao
collection DOAJ
description Based on the data from a sample of 4832 from the Chinese General Social Survey in 2018, this study examines the impact of Internet usage on the wage equation for males and females by using the robust least squares regression method, the threshold regression method, and the quantile regression method and decomposes the gender wage gap on this basis by using the RIF regression decomposition method. The findings show that, firstly, in either linear or nonlinear effects, Internet usage has a significant wage premium effect on the male wage equation, and this premium effect increases as male wage income rises, but Internet usage consistently does not have a significant effect on the female wage equation. Secondly, 26.73% of the overall gender wage gap is due to Internet usage, and the presence of gender discrimination in the cyberspace is a significant contributor to this result. Thirdly, Internet usage causes the gender wage gaps at different wage levels to be further widened to different degrees. Specifically, Internet usage has the strongest effect on the gender wage gap at lower wage levels, the second strongest effect on the gender wage gap at higher wage levels, and the weakest effect on the gender wage gap at middle wage levels. The different levels of gender discrimination experienced by females in the cyberspace are an important cause of the differential widening effect of Internet usage on gender wage gaps at different wage levels. Therefore, this study proposes policy recommendations in terms of regulating gender discrimination and introducing relevant female protection policies.
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spelling doaj-art-d804f403c95a46aaa4c023cd1b3c535e2025-02-03T06:04:46ZengWileyHuman Behavior and Emerging Technologies2578-18632023-01-01202310.1155/2023/7580041Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey DataJiacheng Gao0Yue Liu1Department of SociologyDepartment of SociologyBased on the data from a sample of 4832 from the Chinese General Social Survey in 2018, this study examines the impact of Internet usage on the wage equation for males and females by using the robust least squares regression method, the threshold regression method, and the quantile regression method and decomposes the gender wage gap on this basis by using the RIF regression decomposition method. The findings show that, firstly, in either linear or nonlinear effects, Internet usage has a significant wage premium effect on the male wage equation, and this premium effect increases as male wage income rises, but Internet usage consistently does not have a significant effect on the female wage equation. Secondly, 26.73% of the overall gender wage gap is due to Internet usage, and the presence of gender discrimination in the cyberspace is a significant contributor to this result. Thirdly, Internet usage causes the gender wage gaps at different wage levels to be further widened to different degrees. Specifically, Internet usage has the strongest effect on the gender wage gap at lower wage levels, the second strongest effect on the gender wage gap at higher wage levels, and the weakest effect on the gender wage gap at middle wage levels. The different levels of gender discrimination experienced by females in the cyberspace are an important cause of the differential widening effect of Internet usage on gender wage gaps at different wage levels. Therefore, this study proposes policy recommendations in terms of regulating gender discrimination and introducing relevant female protection policies.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/7580041
spellingShingle Jiacheng Gao
Yue Liu
Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
Human Behavior and Emerging Technologies
title Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
title_full Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
title_fullStr Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
title_full_unstemmed Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
title_short Has Internet Usage Really Narrowed the Gender Wage Gap?: Evidence from Chinese General Social Survey Data
title_sort has internet usage really narrowed the gender wage gap evidence from chinese general social survey data
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/7580041
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