Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization

Rising economic inequality has aggravated long-standing labor market disparities, with one exception: government employment. This article considers the puzzle of black-white wage parity in the American public sector. African Americans are more likely to work in the public than in the private sector,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Perera, IM, King, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2020
_version_ 1797059096662245376
author Perera, IM
King, D
author_facet Perera, IM
King, D
author_sort Perera, IM
collection OXFORD
description Rising economic inequality has aggravated long-standing labor market disparities, with one exception: government employment. This article considers the puzzle of black-white wage parity in the American public sector. African Americans are more likely to work in the public than in the private sector, and their wages are higher there. The article builds on prior work emphasizing institutional factors conditioning this outcome to argue that employee mobilization can motor it. As public sector unions gained political influence postwar, their large constituencies of black, blue-collar workers, drawing on both militant and nonviolent tactics of the urbanizing civil rights movement, advocated for improved working conditions. Archival sources confirm this pattern at the federal level. The employment and activism of African Americans in low-skilled federal jobs pivoted union attention to blue-collar issues and directly contributed to the enactment of a transparent, universal wage schedule for the blue-collar federal workforce (the Federal Wage System). The result was greater pay parity for African Americans, as well as for other disadvantaged groups.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:59:26Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:26c0d9cf-0bf5-4a04-8048-212113cc3e2e
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:59:26Z
publishDate 2020
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:26c0d9cf-0bf5-4a04-8048-212113cc3e2e2022-03-26T12:02:59ZRacial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilizationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:26c0d9cf-0bf5-4a04-8048-212113cc3e2eEnglishSymplectic ElementsSAGE Publications2020Perera, IMKing, DRising economic inequality has aggravated long-standing labor market disparities, with one exception: government employment. This article considers the puzzle of black-white wage parity in the American public sector. African Americans are more likely to work in the public than in the private sector, and their wages are higher there. The article builds on prior work emphasizing institutional factors conditioning this outcome to argue that employee mobilization can motor it. As public sector unions gained political influence postwar, their large constituencies of black, blue-collar workers, drawing on both militant and nonviolent tactics of the urbanizing civil rights movement, advocated for improved working conditions. Archival sources confirm this pattern at the federal level. The employment and activism of African Americans in low-skilled federal jobs pivoted union attention to blue-collar issues and directly contributed to the enactment of a transparent, universal wage schedule for the blue-collar federal workforce (the Federal Wage System). The result was greater pay parity for African Americans, as well as for other disadvantaged groups.
spellingShingle Perera, IM
King, D
Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title_full Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title_fullStr Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title_full_unstemmed Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title_short Racial pay parity in the public sector: the overlooked role of employee mobilization
title_sort racial pay parity in the public sector the overlooked role of employee mobilization
work_keys_str_mv AT pereraim racialpayparityinthepublicsectortheoverlookedroleofemployeemobilization
AT kingd racialpayparityinthepublicsectortheoverlookedroleofemployeemobilization