[Accessibility Information]
Welcome Current Issue Index How to Subscribe Archives
Monthly Labor Review Online

Related BLS programs | Related articles

ABSTRACT

June 1992, Vol. 115, No. 6

Trends in wage and salary inequality, 1967-88

W. Norton Grubb
Professor, School of Education, University of California at Berkeley

Robert H. Wilson
Professor, L.B.J. School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin


Earnings inequality in the United States rose in the late 1960's, stabilized for most of the 1970's, then began to grow again in the 1980's. The recent increase arises from changes in labor demand, and not demographic characteristics of U.S. workers. This article explores the relative influence of demographic characteristics and labor market factors on the patterns of national pay inequality from 1967 to 1988, focusing on wages and earnings.

ArrowRead excerpt   ArrowDownload full text in PDF (1095K)


Related BLS programs
Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey
 
Related Monthly Labor Review articles
Has wage inequality stopped growing? December 1997.
 
Reassessing trends in U.S. earnings inequality. December 1997.
 
Earnings mobility in the United States, 1967-91. September 1995.
 
A surge in growing income inequality? August 1995.
 
Gender-related shifts in the distribution of wages. July 1994.

Within Monthly Labor Review Online:
Welcome | Current Issue | Index | Subscribe | Archives

Exit Monthly Labor Review Online:
BLS Home | Publications & Research Papers