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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

The share of female managers in finance has increased but their earnings are still lagging far behind male managers

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
September 29, 2022
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Saara Vaahtoniemi
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The share of women managers in finance has significantly increased in Finland, but their earnings have not caught up with those of men, shows Saara Vaahtoniemi’s doctoral dissertation in the field of economics.

Saara Vaahtoniemi

Credit: Riikka Kalmi / University of Vaasa

The share of women managers in finance has significantly increased in Finland, but their earnings have not caught up with those of men, shows Saara Vaahtoniemi’s doctoral dissertation in the field of economics.

In the beginning of the 1990’s, the share of women in managerial positions in the finance sector in Finland was only 15 percent, whereas by the 2010’s the share of female managers had risen up to almost 50 percent. However, this is not reflected in their earnings, which are lagging far behind the male managers.

­– The earnings of female managers in finance are on average 15 percent lower than male managers’, says Vaahtoniemi who will publicly defend her doctoral dissertation on Friday, September 30, at the University of Vaasa, Finland.

Occupational segregation is a major challenge for equal pay in the financial sector

The finance industry in Finland pays about 20 percent higher wages to their employees than other service industries. This finance wage premium is smaller in Finland than it is for instance in the United States or the United Kingdom. Even though women are a majority in finance, the highest earnings are concentrated to men.  This is largely explained by differences in the educational backgrounds of men and women, which are then reflected as occupational segregation within finance. The majority of women in finance work at the clerical level.

The occupational segregation of men and women is also present at the manager positions.

– Women are working as managers of marketing teams, whereas men are more often managers of investments teams, where the wages are significantly higher than in marketing, says Vaahtoniemi.

Higher education is positively associated with getting promoted to managerial positions for both men and women. However, the wage increases associated with promotions are larger for men than they are for women at all hierarchy levels. Men are further overrepresented in promotions from clerical to expert positions, because the share of men at clerical level jobs is very small.

Shareholder banks pay higher wages than cooperative and savings banks

Vaahtoniemi’s dissertation documents wage differentials between different bank types. Profit maximizing shareholder banks pay higher wages to their employees than cooperative and savings banks do. On the other hand, in cooperative and savings banks the wage differentials between workers are small.

Bonuses are paid more often to managers in shareholder banks, while in cooperative and savings banks bonus payments are more equally distributed to workers at manager, expert and clerical levels.

In her dissertation, Vaahtoniemi has used wage data from the Confederation of Finnish Industries from 1990 to 2014. 

Doctoral dissertation

Vaahtoniemi, Saara (2022) Money, Merits and Gender: Essays on wage differentials. Acta Wasaensia 490. Doctoral dissertation. Vaasan yliopisto / University of Vaasa.

Publication pdf: https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-395-031-3

Public defence

The public examination of M.Sc. Saara Vaahtoniemi’s doctoral dissertation in Economics “Money, Merits and Gender: Essays on wage differentials” will be held on Friday 30.9.2022 at noon at the University of Vaasa.

Professor, docent Antti Kauhanen (University of Jyväskylä, ETLA Economic Research) will act as an opponent and Professor Panu Kalmi (University of Vaasa) as a custos. The defence will be held in Finnish.



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