Volume 8, Number 4 (Fall) 1973

Blinder, Alan S. 1973. "Wage Discrimination: Reduced Form and Structural Estimates." Journal of Human Resources 8(4):436-455.

Regressions explaining the wage rates of white males, black males, and white females are used to analyze the white-black wage differential among men and the male-female wage differential among whites. A distinction is drawn between reduced form and structural wage equations, and both are estimated. They are shown to have very different implications for analyzing the white-black and male-female wage differentials. When the two sets of estimates are synthesized, they jointly imply that 70 percent of the overall race differential and 100 percent of the overall sex differential are ultimately attributable to discrimination of various sorts.

The author is Assistant Professor of Economics, Princeton University. I owe a great deal to Robert E. Hall who furnished me with the data, assisted with computational problems, and commented astutely on an earlier draft. I am also indebted to Orley Ashenfelter, Yoram Ben-Porath, Nicholas Barr, Ronald Oaxaca, Ray Fair, A. P. Thirlwall, and a referee for their helpful comments. Partial support under National Science Foundation Grant GS 32003X is gratefully acknowledged.


© 2003 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

US ISSN 0022-166X

Return to JHR Home Page