Calendrier du mois de octobre 2024
Programme de la semaine précédente | Programme de la semaine | Programme de la semaine suivante | |
(du 2025-05-05 au 2025-05-12) | (du 2025-05-12 au 2025-05-18) | (du 2025-05-18 au 2025-05-25) |
Semaine du 2025-05-12 au 2025-05-18 |
PSE Internal Seminar
Du 16/05/2025 de 12:30 à 13:30
R2-01
STAROPOLI Carine (Université Rouen Normandie & PSE)
*
Brown Bag Economics of Innovation Seminar
Du 16/05/2025 de 10:00 à 12:00
3 rue d'Ulm, Collège de France, 75005 Paris
MALGOUYRES Clement(CREST)
HOLZHEU Kerstin(Sciences Po)
*
Macroeconomics Seminar
Du 15/05/2025 de 16:00 à 17:15
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, salle R2-01
WOLF Christian (MIT)
*
Travail et économie publique externe
Du 15/05/2025 de 12:30 à 13:30
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09
LE BARBANCHON Thomas (Bocconi)
*
PEPES (Paris Empirical Political Economics) Working Group
Du 15/05/2025 de 12:30 à 14:00
Science Po
XUE Mélanie (LSE)
*
Behavior seminar
Du 15/05/2025 de 11:00 à 12:00
R2-21
ROSS Don ((University College Cork, University of Cape Town, Georgia State University) )
*
Paris Trade Seminar
Du 13/05/2025 de 14:00 à 15:15
PSE, 48 boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, salle R2-01
ANCA Cristea (U. of Oregon)
*
Applied Economics Lunch Seminar
Du 13/05/2025 de 12:30 à 13:30
salle R-2.21
NEEF Theresa (Halle Institute for Economic Research & World Inequality Lab)
The Long Way to Gender Equality: Gender Pay Differences in Germany, 1871-2021
This paper provides the first time series of the gender earnings ratio for the
full-time employed workforce in Germany since the 1870s and compares Germany’s path with the Swedish and U.S. cases. The industrialization period
yielded slow advances in economic gender relations due to women’s delayed
inclusion in the industrial workforce. The first half of the 20th century exhibited a marked leap. In Germany, the gender earnings ratio increased from 47%
in 1913 to 58% in 1937. Similar increases are visible in Sweden and the United
States. In all three countries, the interplay between increased women’s education and increased returns to education due to the expanding white-collar
sector fueled pay convergence. Yet in Germany, women’s educational catch-up
was slowed due to the dominance of on-the-job vocational training. German
women’s migration from low-paid agricultural work to higher-paid white-collar
jobs was predominantly increasing the gender pay ratio. The postwar period
brought diverging developments between Germany, Sweden and the United
States due to different economic conditions and policy action.
Roy Seminar (ADRES)
Du 12/05/2025 de 16:00 à 17:15
R1-09
UNVER Utku (Boston College)
*