The Japan Times - Claudia Goldin: Nobel-winning sleuth of the gender pay gap

EUR -
AED 4.21081
AFN 73.380876
ALL 95.821367
AMD 434.905178
ANG 2.052472
AOA 1051.413124
ARS 1598.904666
AUD 1.629082
AWG 2.063842
AZN 1.94815
BAM 1.953805
BBD 2.323693
BDT 141.535462
BGN 1.959858
BHD 0.432824
BIF 3420.777931
BMD 1.146579
BND 1.473185
BOB 7.971763
BRL 6.019431
BSD 1.153753
BTN 106.983876
BWP 15.64616
BYN 3.516599
BYR 22472.950295
BZD 2.320396
CAD 1.57407
CDF 2602.734703
CHF 0.909206
CLF 0.026588
CLP 1049.842202
CNY 7.880495
CNH 7.914451
COP 4251.916593
CRC 538.855456
CUC 1.146579
CUP 30.384346
CVE 110.164988
CZK 24.455843
DJF 205.451403
DKK 7.472726
DOP 69.752456
DZD 152.054803
EGP 59.895114
ERN 17.198686
ETB 180.146883
FJD 2.544033
FKP 0.859302
GBP 0.864354
GEL 3.112902
GGP 0.859302
GHS 12.576583
GIP 0.859302
GMD 84.846638
GNF 10111.658098
GTQ 8.836977
GYD 241.360884
HKD 8.986944
HNL 30.535809
HRK 7.531859
HTG 151.205259
HUF 393.429124
IDR 19487.258327
ILS 3.571474
IMP 0.859302
INR 107.05179
IQD 1511.228056
IRR 1507751.511799
ISK 143.216573
JEP 0.859302
JMD 181.150555
JOD 0.812866
JPY 183.156266
KES 148.539438
KGS 100.2684
KHR 4620.188443
KMF 490.735959
KPW 1031.896421
KRW 1719.633639
KWD 0.351839
KYD 0.961378
KZT 556.553574
LAK 24756.252748
LBP 103330.654412
LKR 359.238936
LRD 211.11834
LSL 19.257861
LTL 3.385549
LVL 0.693554
LYD 7.361959
MAD 10.796099
MDL 20.115493
MGA 4805.056884
MKD 61.648715
MMK 2407.934705
MNT 4094.550606
MOP 9.313745
MRU 46.048011
MUR 53.327419
MVR 17.726477
MWK 2000.558306
MXN 20.431294
MYR 4.515167
MZN 73.268833
NAD 19.257861
NGN 1563.566729
NIO 42.454976
NOK 10.999878
NPR 171.188773
NZD 1.971474
OMR 0.440833
PAB 1.153653
PEN 3.939777
PGK 4.977893
PHP 68.883603
PKR 322.29402
PLN 4.274842
PYG 7456.88075
QAR 4.195092
RON 5.092302
RSD 117.454414
RUB 96.173121
RWF 1684.110645
SAR 4.305014
SBD 9.224504
SCR 16.621753
SDG 689.093572
SEK 10.790324
SGD 1.471256
SHP 0.860231
SLE 28.263454
SLL 24043.20278
SOS 659.356045
SRD 42.853431
STD 23731.872367
STN 24.479805
SVC 10.094188
SYP 126.795321
SZL 19.263192
THB 37.591168
TJS 11.034483
TMT 4.013027
TND 3.394818
TOP 2.760687
TRY 50.815525
TTD 7.820446
TWD 36.667914
TZS 2982.515766
UAH 50.737264
UGX 4340.059947
USD 1.146579
UYU 46.717588
UZS 14068.228386
VES 517.041634
VND 30172.228929
VUV 137.122676
WST 3.134408
XAF 655.416296
XAG 0.015356
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.098687
XCG 2.079131
XDR 0.815131
XOF 655.419151
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.545132
ZAR 19.480092
ZMK 10320.594636
ZMW 22.561486
ZWL 369.198001
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.83

    -0.53%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    71.84

    -1.5%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    16.6

    -1.27%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    33.86

    -1.27%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.89

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -2.0800

    87.72

    -2.37%

  • NGG

    -3.0200

    87.4

    -3.46%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    25.75

    -1.01%

  • GSK

    -1.3500

    52.06

    -2.59%

  • JRI

    -0.1370

    12.323

    -1.11%

  • BTI

    -2.4600

    58.09

    -4.23%

  • AZN

    -2.8700

    188.42

    -1.52%

  • BP

    0.7600

    44.61

    +1.7%

  • VOD

    -0.3800

    14.37

    -2.64%

Claudia Goldin: Nobel-winning sleuth of the gender pay gap
Claudia Goldin: Nobel-winning sleuth of the gender pay gap / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP

Claudia Goldin: Nobel-winning sleuth of the gender pay gap

Claudia Goldin has long thought of herself as a kind of detective within economics, employing tools across academic disciplines in a quest to examine how women fit into the workforce.

Text size:

On Monday, Goldin, the first woman to be tenured at Harvard University's economics department, attained the "dismal science" most exalted honour: the Nobel Prize for Economics.

Reached by telephone, Goldin told AFP the Nobel is a "very important prize, not just for me, but for the many people who work in this field and who are trying to understand why there is so much change, but there are still large differences" in pay.

In her sleuthing, Goldin, 77, has sought to reveal the reasons for the long-standing gender pay gap, including the challenges women have encountered in balancing family and professional responsibilities since the early twentieth century.

Goldin has focused on five periods: the 1900-1920 period when the few women who garnered college degrees had to choose between work and family, followed by the 1920-1940 phase when women left the workforce and started families during the Great Depression.

In the years after World War II through to about 1960, women were discouraged from entering the workforce instead of raising families. But their daughters, raised in the 1970s and 1980s, benefited from the birth control pill, with more women choosing careers and more than a quarter not having children.

The most recent generation of women is still navigating these dynamics, benefiting from evolving technology that has permitted greater flexibility on when to have children, but still confronting a grinding pay gap.

In her 2021 book, "Career and family: women's century-long journey towards equity," Goldin explored the effect of what she termed "greedy work" -- jobs with inflexible or unpredictable schedules that pay better.

Through her research, Goldin determined that women were more likely to abandon such jobs, while men are more likely to be enticed by the higher pay.

"Under these conditions, women will shift to a firm with less demanding hours or leave the workforce," Goldin said in a 2021 interview with Harvard Business Review.

- 'Neglected' subject -

Goldin described her unorthodox approach in an autobiographical essay for a 1998 book on economists at work.

"There has often been no agenda or program, no particular theory that must be followed," she wrote. "Yet the subconscious produces nagging questions."

In the years after graduate school, Goldin focused initially on the economic history of the South after the Civil War.

But around 1980, Goldin began to "realise that something was missing" from the study of economics: the wife and mother.

"I neglected her because the sources had.

"Women were in the data when young and single and often when widowed," she wrote. "But their stories were faintly heard after they married, for they were often not producing goods and services in sectors that were, or would be, part of (gross national product)."

Goldin's pioneering approach included launching in 2014 undergraduate women in economics program, an initiative to encourage more female economics major.

Born in the Bronx, New York in 1946, Golden was initially fascinated by archeology and the mummies at the New York's Museum of Natural History.

When she entered Cornell University, Goldin planned to study microbiology, but soon shifted ground after taking a course on industrial organisation with economist Alfred Kahn.

Goldin is married to fellow Harvard economist Larry Katz, with the two sharing a passion for bird watching and Pika, a 13-year-old Golden Retriever whose exploits are chronicled on her web page at Harvard.

Goldin told AFP she still thinks of herself as a detective, someone who when faced with a problem, knows "I just have to find the facts, figure it out and I'll solve the problem."

M.Matsumoto--JT