Affirmative action taken in favour of women under the constitution and other statutory provisions: In the perspective of Bangladesh
Abstract
This paper reviews evidence indicating that, as it has been enforced so far, affirmative action
has contributed negligibly to women's progress in the workplace. Affirmative action can be
modelled as a tax on employers whose female employment growth falls below a certain rate.
Clearly, if labour supply shifts result in female employment growth greater than the regulatory
standard, the tax constraint will not be binding. As we shall see, this may help explain an
affirmative action program that is generally ineffective for women, although it has been
effective for minorities. Federal anti-bias policies in general, and the system of affirmative
action goals in particular, have been accused of instituting employment quotas. This paper
reviews evidence on the homogenization of the workplace predicted by the quota theory, as
well as considering more direct evidence on whether affirmative action goals are really quotas
in lambs' clothing. I shall also review the slim evidence on the most fundamental and
controversial criticism of affirmative action: that rather than reducing discrimination against
women and minorities, it has induced discrimination against white males. A new methodology
employing direct productivity measures rather than the traditional but limited wage equation
residuals proves useful in exploring this issue.
Collections
- 2020 - 2025 [120]