Francois, John Nana, et al. “The Forest Behind the Tree: Heterogeneity in How U.S. Governor’s Party Affects Black Workers”. The Review of Black Political Economy, 2022, p. 003464462210930, https://doi.org/10.1177/00346446221093053.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Francois, John Nana
Author: Kakeu, Johnson
Author: Tchuente, Guy
Date Issued
2022
Date Published Online
2022-04-27
Abstract

Income inequality is a distributional phenomenon. This paper examines the impact of U.S. governor's party allegiance (Republican vs Democrat) on ethnic wage gap. A descriptive analysis of the distribution of yearly earnings of Whites and Blacks reveals a divergence in their respective shapes over time suggesting that aggregate analysis may mask important heterogeneous effects. This motivates a granular estimation of the comparative causal effect of governors' party affiliation on labor market outcomes. This paper uses a regression discontinuity design (RDD) based on marginal electoral victories and samples of quantiles groups by wage and hours worked. Overall, the distributional causal estimations show that the vast majority of subgroups of Black workers earnings are not affected by democrat governors' policies, suggesting the possible existence of structural factors in the labor markets that contribute to create and keep a wage trap and/or hour worked trap for most of the subgroups of Black workers. Democrat governors increase the number of hours worked of Black workers at the highest quartiles of earnings. A bivariate quantiles groups analysis shows that democrats decrease the total hours worked for Black workers who have the largest number of hours worked and earn the least. Black workers earnings more and working fewer hours than half of the sample see their number of hours worked increase under a democrat governor.

Language

  • English
Rights
CC-BY
Page range
003464462210930
Host Title
The Review of Black Political Economy
Host Abbreviated Title
The Review of Black Political Economy
ISSN
0034-6446
1936-4814

Department

Rights

  • CC BY