Arbeitspapier

Systemic Discrimination among Large U.S. Employers

We study the results of a massive nationwide correspondence experiment sending more than 83,000 fictitious applications with randomized characteristics to geographically dispersed jobs posted by 108 of the largest U.S. employers. Distinctively Black names reduce the probability of employer contact by 2.1 percentage points relative to distinctively white names. The magnitude of this racial gap in contact rates differs substantially across firms, exhibiting a between-company standard deviation of 1.9 percentage points. Despite an insignificant average gap in contact rates between male and female applicants, we find a between-company standard deviation in gender contact gaps of 2.7 percentage points, revealing that some firms favor male applicants while others favor women. Company-specific racial contact gaps are temporally and spatially persistent, and negatively correlated with firm profitability, federal contractor status, and a measure of recruiting centralization. Discrimination exhibits little geographical dispersion, but two digit industry explains roughly half of the cross-firm variation in both racial and gender contact gaps. Contact gaps are highly concentrated in particular companies, with firms in the top quintile of racial discrimination responsible for nearly half of lost contacts to Black applicants in the experiment. Controlling false discovery rates to the 5% level, 23 individual companies are found to discriminate against Black applicants. Our findings establish that systemic illegal discrimination is concentrated among a select set of large employers, many of which can be identified with high confidence using large scale inference methods.

Sprache
Englisch

Erschienen in
Series: IZA Discussion Papers ; No. 14634

Klassifikation
Wirtschaft
Bayesian Analysis: General
Field Experiments
Labor Discrimination
Labor Discrimination: Public Policy
Labor Law
Illegal Behavior and the Enforcement of Law
Thema
discrimination
audit studies
empirical bayes
q-values

Ereignis
Geistige Schöpfung
(wer)
Kline, Patrick
Rose, Evan K.
Walters, Christopher R.
Ereignis
Veröffentlichung
(wer)
Institute of Labor Economics (IZA)
(wo)
Bonn
(wann)
2021

Handle
Letzte Aktualisierung
10.03.2025, 11:44 MEZ

Datenpartner

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Objekttyp

  • Arbeitspapier

Beteiligte

  • Kline, Patrick
  • Rose, Evan K.
  • Walters, Christopher R.
  • Institute of Labor Economics (IZA)

Entstanden

  • 2021

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