A field experiment to study sex and age discrimination in selection processes for staff recruitment in the spanish labor market
ISSN: 1578-0252
Año de publicación: 2008
Número: 20
Páginas: 3-46
Tipo: Artículo
Otras publicaciones en: Papeles de trabajo del Instituto de Estudios Fiscales. Serie economía
Resumen
This article presents the findings of a field experiment carried out in Madrid which aim was to a analyse gender and age discrimination in hiring in the labour market of Madrid. A set of five pairs of fictitious man-woman curricula were sent in response to 1,062 job offers in six occupations which were advertised on Internet over an eight-month period. It was quantified subsequently the extent to which the different firms contacted more or less the candidates of different sex, age and marital status. No discrimination is detected against women in terms of access to job interviews; however, discriminatory conduct is seen regarding the phenomenon of occupational gender, in the sense that there is a continuance among employers of stereotyped views on the greater suitability of women for certain tasks. No evidence is found to indicate firms showing relative discrimination against married women with children in the first phase of hiring process. And a clear evidence of discrimination is obtained on the basis of age: firms show a substantial fall in interest over interviewing 38-year-old candidates (compared to those aged 24 or 28). This would imply that the tendency to discriminate against older workers may be high, and, what is more, it may start at a surprisingly young age.