Gender differences in subjective well-being in Central and Eastern Europe
Gender differences in subjective well-being in Central and Eastern Europe
The literature suggests that the transition process from centrally planned to market economies in Central and Eastern Europe increased the gender gap in poverty. Evidence for women’s higher poverty risk is scarce, given that most analyses use household-level data and assume equal sharing of income within households, an assumption that has been questioned in recent literature. This article uses individual data on subjective well-being to examine the extent of gender differences in welfare in transition countries. OECD countries serve for benchmarking results. Findings show that the gender gap in subjective well-being is more predominant in post-communist than in OECD countries. Relatively little of the gender gap can be attributed to gender differences in socio-economic position in transition countries, but certain attributes, such as higher education and unemployment, impact differently on reported well-being for women and men.
central and eastern europe, gender inequality, poverty, subjective well-being
74-85
Schnepf, Sylke Viola
c987c810-d33c-4675-9764-b5e15c581dbc
February 2010
Schnepf, Sylke Viola
c987c810-d33c-4675-9764-b5e15c581dbc
Schnepf, Sylke Viola
(2010)
Gender differences in subjective well-being in Central and Eastern Europe.
Journal of European Social Policy, 20 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/0958928709352542).
Abstract
The literature suggests that the transition process from centrally planned to market economies in Central and Eastern Europe increased the gender gap in poverty. Evidence for women’s higher poverty risk is scarce, given that most analyses use household-level data and assume equal sharing of income within households, an assumption that has been questioned in recent literature. This article uses individual data on subjective well-being to examine the extent of gender differences in welfare in transition countries. OECD countries serve for benchmarking results. Findings show that the gender gap in subjective well-being is more predominant in post-communist than in OECD countries. Relatively little of the gender gap can be attributed to gender differences in socio-economic position in transition countries, but certain attributes, such as higher education and unemployment, impact differently on reported well-being for women and men.
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GenderDifferencesSubjectiveWellBeingCEEC_SVSchnepf_060709.doc
- Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: February 2010
Keywords:
central and eastern europe, gender inequality, poverty, subjective well-being
Organisations:
Social Statistics
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Local EPrints ID: 150075
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/150075
ISSN: 0958-9287
PURE UUID: 6e16f0d8-bd94-43c7-b480-0b37c7771b1d
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Date deposited: 04 May 2010 10:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:11
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Author:
Sylke Viola Schnepf
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