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Glass Ceilings: The Status of Women as Officials and Managers in the Private Sector

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission


Executive Summary

An examination of EEO-1 data, primarily from the most recent 2002 reports, provides insights into the status of women as officials and managers in the private sector.

  • The percent of women officials and managers in the private sector has increased from just over 29 percent in 1990 to 36.4 percent in 2002.
  • Women represent 48 percent of all EEO-1 employment, but represent only 36.4 percent of officials and managers. Women make up 80.3 percent of office and clerical workers. Interestingly, women exceed their overall employment rates as professionals and sales workers and are quite close to their overall employment rate in technical jobs.
  • Industries from the health care sector of the economy are the most likely to employ women as officials and managers.
  • Manufacturing industries are least likely to employ women as officials and managers.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers and white collar jobs (professionals, technicians and sales workers) indicate that women have the highest odds of being managers in the industries of Legal Services, Scheduled Air Transportation, Services to Building and Dwellings and Offices of Physicians.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers and white collar jobs indicate that women have the lowest odds of being managers in Nursing Care Facilities, Full-Service Restaurants, Pulp, Paper and Paperboard Mills and Animal Slaughtering and Processing industries.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers at headquarters and officials and managers at field establishments indicate that women have the highest odds of being managers at headquarter facilities in Motor Vehicle Manufacturing, Electrical Power Generation, Transmission and Distribution, Aerospace Product and Parts Manufacturing, and General Freight Trucking industries.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers at headquarters and officials and managers at field establishments indicate that women have the lowest odds of being managers at headquarter facilities in industries from the health care sector of the economy.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers at headquarters and white collar workers at headquarters indicate that women have the highest odds of being managers at headquarter facilities in Legal Services, Employment Services, Security Brokers, and Telecommunications industries.
  • Comparisons between officials and managers at headquarters and white collar workers at headquarter facilities indicate that women have the lowest odds of being managers at headquarter facilities in Investigation and Security Services, Full-Service Restaurants, Other Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing and Motor Vehicle Body and Trailer Manufacturing industries.
  • As a general rule, industries with a low proportion of women in headquarters management have a low proportion of women in their respective recruiting pools (field management and white collar jobs at headquarters). Conversely, industries with a high proportion of women in headquarters management have a high proportion of women in their respective recruiting pools (field management and white collar jobs at headquarters).
  • Industries with a high proportion of women in headquarters management are more likely to have disparities between the men and women in field management pools and less likely to have such disparities in white collar pools. Conversely, industries with a low proportion of women in headquarters management are less likely to have disparities in field management pools and more likely to have disparities from white collar pools.
  • Employers may find it useful to explore their own employment practices in light of the findings of this report.
    • This self-evaluation could apply the statistical models and analytical techniques utilized in the report to their firm's actual promotion pools so that the entry of women and minorities into top management positions is assessed.
    • Employers can follow-up on such analyses with a review of their formal and informal personnel practices to identify those policies and procedures that foster the open and competitive selection of top management as well as those policies and procedures that restrict open competition.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

While the presence and status of women in the work force have increased dramatically since the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, there are still concerns about the relative absence of women in higher management ranks, which some have described as the "glass ceiling." In 1995, the Federal Glass Ceiling Commission(1) concluded that "today's American labor force is gender and race segregated - white men fill most top management positions in corporations." The issue has taken on particular significance as women and minorities have increased their occupational status. The term "glass ceiling" is generally used to refer to instances where women and minorities have progressed within a firm but, despite their ambitions and qualifications, find it difficult to make the movement into key higher level management positions, or management positions at all. The social disadvantage of these glass ceilings is the inability of the most qualified employees to move into the most important positions due to irrelevant criteria such as race or gender. The selection of a less qualified employee negatively impacts both the employer and ultimately the economy as a whole. The successful elimination of glass ceilings requires not just an effective enforcement strategy but the involvement of employers, employees and others in identifying and reducing attitudinal and other forms of organizational barriers encountered by minorities and women in advancing to higher level management positions in different workplace settings.

The main purpose of this report is to use data from the 2002 EEO-1 Survey of Firms in Private Industry to explore the status of women in management. The research will develop some new ways of analyzing the EEO-1 data that focus on access to management positions generally, and perhaps more importantly, access to management positions at headquarter facilities. The primary contribution of these analyses of the EEO-1 survey is the ability to raise important problems and questions about gender-based discrimination given the wide variations in the types of firms and industries in the American economy. While this initial report on glass ceilings focuses on the status of women, the analyses developed here can be applied to examine minority groups.

The report takes strides toward examining the glass ceiling problem within the boundaries of the EEO-1 survey, which historically has collected data on officials and managers in one large job group. By aggregating all managers with officials and reporting them in a single category, the data cannot be examined to show the various levels of responsibility. Despite this limitation, the results of an analysis of EEO-1 data in the Officials and Managers category as well as methodologies for examining entry into management positions can prove useful. A goal of this research is to stimulate readers, especially employers, to identify and reduce inappropriate obstacles women encounter in advancing to management in different workplace settings.

This research examines the issue of glass ceilings from various perspectives. The first perspective examines the critical initial selection into management positions broadly defined as any type of managerial position. To identify potential gender-based disparities, the employment of women as officials and managers is compared to the potential pool of managers from the white collar positions of professionals, technicians and sales workers. The second and third perspectives focus on the advancement of headquarters managers from two kinds of potential pools: managers in field operations and white collar employees at headquarters. Specifically, women employed as officials and managers at the headquarters facilities are compared to women employed as officials and managers at the firm's other establishments. Women employed as officials and managers at headquarters are also compared to women in white collar positions at headquarters.

These three approaches combine to provide an analysis that reflects how officials and managers are selected.(2) The behavior of firms within industries is summarized to provide insight into the characteristics of different industries.

Research into the glass ceiling and occupational barriers has included useful examinations of both public and private sector work forces. Research of note includes Reid, Kerr and Miller 2000; Lewis and Nice 1994; Tomaskovic-Devy 1993; Carrington and Troske, 1995 and 1998; Weeden, 1998 and Blau, Simpson and Anderson (1998)(3). The issue of glass ceilings can also be viewed as a special case of occupational segregation.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) operates a data collection system that, in essence, collects data from all employers in the United States with 100 or more employees. The EEO-1 collects data from private employers. These annual reports indicate the composition of employers' workforces by gender and by race/ethnic category.(4) In 2002, more than 39,000 employers submitted, as appropriate, individual establishment and headquarters reports for more than 225,000 reporting establishments with about 52 million employees. The EEO-1 collects data on nine major job categories: (1) officials and managers, (2) professionals, (3) technicians, (4) sales workers, (5) office and clerical workers, (6) craft workers, (7) operatives, (8) laborers and (9) service workers.(5) Race/ethnic designations used in the year 2002 EEO-1 reports are White (not of Hispanic origin), Black (not of Hispanic origin), Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaskan Native. In addition to the work force data provided by the employer, information about each establishment is added to the database. This additional information includes the establishment's North American Industrial Classification System code, the establishment's county and its metropolitan area code. Firm level EEO-1 data are confidential.(6)

The Employment of Women as Officials and Managers

The percentage of women officials and managers in the private sector has increased from just over 29 percent in 1990 to 36.4 percent in 2002.

Employment of Women as Officials and Managers (1990-2002)

Imagen
YEAR 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 2000 2001 2002
WOMEN PERCENT 29.3 29.8 30.5 31.5 32.2 33.0 33.4 34.0 34.5 35.5 35.9 36.4

Despite this increase in women officials and managers, a more detailed examination of the 2002 data shows that some job groups have more women than others. As Figure 2 displays, although women represent 48 percent of all EEO-1 employment, they only represent 36.4 percent of officials and managers. Office and clerical workers comprise the largest concentration of women at 80.3 percent. Interestingly, women exceed their overall employment rate as professionals and sales workers and are quite close to their overall employment rate in technical jobs.

Distribution of Women Across EEO-1 Job Groups, 2002

Imagen
JOB GROUP PERCENT
OFFICIALS AND MANAGERS 36.4
PROFESSIONALS 51.7
TECHNICIANS 45.9
SALES WORKERS 56.4
CLERICAL WORKERS 80.3
CRAFT WORKERS 12.8
OPERATIVES 26.3
LABORERS 33.7
SERVICE WORKERS 57.7
TOTAL EMPLOYMENT 48.0

Just as women are not employed evenly among job groups, they are not employed evenly in all industries. It is useful then to examine the employment of women as officials and managers by industry. For this purpose, the North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) code at the industry (four digit) level is utilized. In order to summarize these results in a useful manner, only the 50 industries with the highest level of employment were examined.

Table 1 lists the highest ranked industries based on the percentage of women officials and managers from the 50 largest industries.

Table 1
Industry Ranking: Highest Ten
Based on Employment of Women as
Officials and Managers
From the Top 50 Industries

INDUSTRY MANAGERS REPORTS FILED
WOMEN WOMEN PERCENT TOTAL
Nursing Care Facilities 43,579 77.20 56,446 5,641
Offices of Physicians 11,952 67.65 17,668 1,143
Community Care Facilities for the Elderly 9,025 67.60 13,350 1,464
General Medical & Surgical Hospitals 156,734 67.53 232,103 3,782
Other Ambulatory Health Care Services 15,159 58.66 25,841 1,222
Department Stores 61,214 56.16 108,999 9,087
Legal Services 8,212 50.57 16,240 1,254
Depository Credit Intermediation 104,533 49.24 212,307 5,139
Insurance Carriers 74,321 48.49 153,256 3,584
Nondepository Credit Intermediation 20,357 46.99 43,325 858

Clearly, the health care sector of the economy is the most likely to employ women as officials and managers. It should be noted that Offices of Physicians includes Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) medical centers. However, other more commerce-type industries such as Department Stores, Legal Services, Banking (Depository Credit Intermediation and Nondepository Credit Intermediation) are also included.

Table 2 provides the list of industries employing the lowest percentages of women officials and managers. Here the manufacturing industries appear to be much less likely to hire women as officials and managers.

Table 2
Industry Ranking: Lowest Ten
Based on Employment of Women as
Officials and Manager

INDUSTRY MANAGERS REPORTS FILED
WOMEN WOMEN PERCENT TOTAL
Motor Vehicle Body & Trailer Mfg 2,737 13.84 19,781 493
Aerospace Product & Parts Mfg 6,204 14.73 42,119 754
Motor Vehicle Parts Mfg 5,736 15.14 37,888 1,195
Elec Pwr Generation, Transmsn & Distribution 8,468 15.16 55,874 1,899
Other Fabricated Metal Product Mfg 3,638 15.71 23,151 1,111
Architectural, Engineering & Related Services 12,237 16.08 76,090 2,881
Motor Vehicle Mfg 4,525 17.28 26,181 216
Plastics Product Mfg 6,200 18.11 34,236 2,235
Converted Paper Product Mfg 5,072 18.24 27,813 1,526
General Freight Trucking 4,396 18.45 23,824 1,532

 

Use of Odds Ratios to Identify Disparities

The calculation and testing of an odds ratio provides a useful technique for assessing the possible existence of a glass ceiling.(7) In examining glass ceilings, the odds ratio can be thought of as the odds of men being managers based on their employment in a promotion pool divided by the odds of women being managers based on their employment in the same promotion pool. (In the sections that follow, different definitions of promotion pools are utilized.) The odds for men would be the number of men reported as officials and managers divided by the sum of men reported in a possible promotion. The same calculation would be made for women, and the odds ratio would be the division of these two odds:

G = ( Fm × Mp) / (Mm × Fp)

where

G= Odds ratio for a glass ceiling
M= Male
F= Female
m = Officials and Managers
p = Promotion pool

The term p can be modified to reflect appropriate pools as necessary. An example of the odds ratio calculation to a glass ceiling issue is provided in Table 3. When the odds ratio is 1, men and women have equal odds of being a manager. The data in Table 8, shows there are 271 men who are officials and managers and 357 men in a pool of potential officials and managers. At the same time, there are 52 women officials and managers and 159 women in a pool of potential officials and managers. The odds ratio of 0.431 indicates that men have higher odds of being a manager (271/357=0.7591) and women have lower odds (52/159=0.3270)(8).

Table 3

Application of Odds Ratio to Glass Ceiling

  PROMOTION POOL MANAGERS
WOMEN 159 52
MEN 357 271
ODDS RATIO 0.431
LOG OF ODDS RATIO -0.842

Comparisons of White Collar to Management Employees

As a first step in examining work forces for glass ceilings, it is useful to deal with the threshold issue of the exclusion of women from management positions. When women experience relatively high employment status, it might be expected that they are as likely to occupy management positions as their male peers. This likelihood can be examined to some extent using EEO-1 data. The employment of men and women is divided between managers and white collar employees. White collar employees are defined as those in the EEO-1 job groups of professionals, technicians and sales workers. These white collar employees were treated as if they represent the pool of workers from which officials and managers are selected.

Steps are taken to eliminate those industries where this assumption is unlikely to be accurate.(9) Further, it is not expected that job groups within the pool of white collar workers contribute evenly to management positions or that these relationships are the same in all industries. Therefore, the job groups are weighted based on their contribution.(10) An odds ratio was computed for each firm within an industry. Firms are defined as all establishments with both the same headquarters and the same industrial classification. The odds for men is the number of men reported as officials and managers divided by the sum of men reported as professionals, technicians and sales workers using weighted values. The same calculation is made for women, and the odds ratio would be the division of these two odds. Once an odds ratio and its logged value is computed for individual firms, medians are then constructed for relevant industries. The distribution of the median log of the odds ratios is examined. Again, the analysis is restricted to the 50 industries with the largest EEO-1 reported employment.

Table 4 indicates firms where women have the highest probabilities of being managers based on their employment in the white collar job groups. These results suggest that women have a higher probability of being managers in selected service industries. Some of the industries where women are highly ranked are also industries where managers might have low status. For example, in Legal Services partners or associates in these firms may be the true managers. Here a number of "office managers" may have originally been employed as clerical workers.

Table 4
Industries Where Women Have the Highest Odds
of Being Officials and Managers Based on Their
Employment as Professionals, Technicians and Salesworkers
Selected From the Top 50 Industries
Based on Total Employment

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT OF WOMEN MANAGERS PERCENT OF WOMEN IN WHITE COLLAR POSITIONS MEDIAN WEIGHTED ODDS RATIO (LOG) TOTAL EMPLOYMENT RANK
Legal Services 522 51.18 40.64 1.004 42
Scheduled Air Transportation 47 35.53 43.83 0.305 13
Services to Buildings & Dwellings 56 19.83 19.74 0.114 26
Offices of Physicians 411 68.95 73.67 0.111 44
Investigation & Security Services 58 24.63 19.46 0.098 20
Computer & Peripheral Equipment Mfg 135 25.66 27.01 0.084 29
Employment Services 145 41.33 51.56 0.077 41
Telecommunications 250 38.08 38.37 0.040 4
Data Processing Services 165 38.73 40.10 0.023 34
Computer Systems Design & Related Services 602 30.06 31.18 0.010 15

Table 5 displays those industries where women have the lowest odds of being officials and managers. A fairly wide variety of industries are represented in this group, including some health care industries, where women tend to be well represented, Full-service and Limited-service Restaurants and Grocery Stores.

Table 5
Industries Where Women Have the Lowest Odds
of Being Officials and Managers Based on Their
Employment as Professionals, Technicians and Salesworkers
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on Total Employment

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT OF WOMEN MANAGERS PERCENT OF WOMEN IN WHITE COLLAR POSITIONS MEDIAN WEIGHTED ODDS RATIO (LOG) TOTAL EMPLOY-MENT RANK
Nursing Care Facilities 1052 73.90 89.10 -0.799 10
Full-Service Restaurants 45 38.17 65.63 -0.738 6
Pulp, Paper & Paperboard Mills 52 17.67 34.79 -0.732 49
Animal Slaughtering & Processing 53 17.51 27.48 -0.706 23
General Medical & Surgical Hospitals 1644 67.25 81.26 -0.691 1
Grocery Stores 292 36.47 56.13 -0.679 2
Community Care Facilities for the Elderly 455 67.27 88.10 -0.648 45
Limited-Service Eating Places 16 31.54 68.92 -0.648 33
General Freight Trucking 61 24.67 60.71 -0.619 32
Printing & Related Support Activities 310 28.21 42.23 -0.603 35

In some of these industries there may be competing explanations for how individuals become managers, which might cause some industries to be lower ranked. For example, in grocery stores, managers might actually come from the EEO-1 job group of laborers (specifically, stockers). The same may be true of the restaurant industries, where managers might have been promoted from the service worker job category as well as from white collar positions. Also, note that an industry such as "Nursing Care Facilities" can be highly ranked based on the percentage of women managers but still exhibit low odds that women are managers because the employment of women in their white collar positions is very high.

Examination of Officials and Managers at Headquarters

In order to better analyze the glass ceiling issue under the limitations of EEO-1 data, officials and managers at a company's headquarters were examined in greater detail. This type of analysis is based on the concept that officials and manager jobs at the headquarters facility are thought of as higher level positions, much closer to the "glass ceiling." These positions are viewed as being more prestigious, higher paying and more powerful in the sense that headquarters facilities are often responsible for monitoring and directing other company establishments. The 2002 EEO-1 data are summarized to allow this type of analysis. Firm-level data are aggregated in a manner that allows the distinction between employees at headquarters and employees at other establishments.(11)

A number of screens were also instituted so that the data are more likely to reflect those situations where assumptions about officials at headquarters are most likely to be valid. To be included a firm must (1) be a multi-establishment company, (2) have more than one official and manager at the headquarters facility, (3) have more than one official and manager in all field units combined, (4) have more officials and managers in the field than at headquarters, (5) have more than 50 employees at headquarters, and (6) have more then 50 employees in all other establishments combined. These requirements, though necessary to make certain that the analysis is appropriate, substantially reduce the number of firms analyzed.

There were 25,681 headquarter facilities that filed EEO-1 reports in 2002. Of these, 872 reported zero employment and were eliminated.(12) This reduces the number of observations from 25,681 to 24,809. There are 9,842 establishment reports where there are headquarters units but no field units. These firms have small facilities and thus are not required to file separate establishment reports. The requirement that the firm have at least one official and manager reduces the sample by 127; another 300 are removed by the requirement that there be at least one official and manager outside of the headquarters unit. The requirement that there be more officials and managers in the field than at headquarters reduces the firms analyzed to 6,667. The requirement that there be 50 employees at headquarters and at the other establishment reduces the sample size to 4,198 companies. While this is less than 20 percent of all possible firms, the reduction may be a good reflection of those employers where glass ceiling problems are likely to be the most relevant and have the largest impact.

It is important to keep in mind that the percentages reported below refer to the relevant firms in an industry rather than all firms in the industry. Additionally, industry designation comes from the headquarters unit which is the primary industry of the firm but the "field" establishments can come from other industries not captured in this summary data.

Two types of analyses are utilized. The first reflects those situations where managers at non-headquarters facilities represent the selection pool for managers at headquarters facilities. Under this scenario, officials and managers in lower level establishments are likely to become officials and managers at the headquarters facility. This can be thought of as a vertical analysis of management positions at headquarters.(13) The second analysis reflects those situations where the white collar employees at headquarters represent the selection pool of managers at headquarters facilities. Under this scenario, it is the white collar workers already at headquarters who are likely to become the officials and managers at headquarters. This can be thought of as a horizontal analysis of management positions at headquarters.

Vertical Analysis

Firms are examined to compare officials and managers at headquarters to officials and managers at their field establishments. As before, an odds ratio test is utilized where the target position is officials and managers at headquarters and the pool is the officials and managers at their other establishments. Once the relevant odds ratios are computed for each firm, the median odds ratio and its logged value for industry is computed (again, the four-digit NAICS code is utilized) and the log of this value is used to sort the industries. Also, as before, in order to provide more meaningful results, the analysis is restricted to those 50 industries with the highest levels of employment.

Table 6 displays those industries where women have the highest odds of becoming officials and managers at headquarters facilities based on their employment as officials and managers at field units.

Table 6
Industries Where Women Have the Highest Odds of Being
Officials and Managers at Headquarters Based on Their Employment
as Field Officials and Managers
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT WOMEN MANAGERS MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO FIELD
HEADQUARTERS FIELD
Motor Vehicle Mfg 9 29.46 15.39 1.00484
Elec Pwr Generation, Transmsn & Distribution 49 25.43 13.94 0.95232
Aerospace Product & Parts Mfg 16 26.85 15.33 0.70066
General Freight Trucking 30 27.95 14.33 0.66480
Services to Buildings & Dwellings 18 35.86 21.41 0.52551
Building Material & Supplies Dealers 21 33.23 18.65 0.47957
Scrty & Comdty Contracts Intermed & Brokerage 11 40.37 36.33 0.46262
Computer & Peripheral Equipment Mfg 21 30.06 26.03 0.44178
Architectural, Engineering & Related Services 82 21.18 14.43 0.43054
Scheduled Air Transportation 14 39.88 30.68 0.42112

The industries with a high ranking represent a variety of industrial sectors including manufacturing, service, finance, utilities and transportation. The highest ranked industry is motor vehicle manufacturing, where 29.46 percent of officials and managers at headquarters facilities are women compared to just 15.39 percent in their field units.

Table 7
Industries Where Women Have the Lowest Odds of Being
Officials and Managers at Headquarters Based on Their Employment
as Field Officials and Managers
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT WOMEN MANAGERS MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO FIELD
HEADQUARTERS FIELD
Nursing Care Facilities 49 58.36 82.77 -0.92316
Community Care Facilities for the Elderly 26 56.12 72.62 -0.85599
General Medical & Surgical Hospitals 150 53.60 71.30 -0.77979
Other Ambulatory Health Care Services 50 52.66 63.44 -0.65155
Offices of Physicians 22 65.38 73.87 -0.43167
Agencies & Other Insurance Related Activities 32 42.20 48.07 -0.40129
Depository Credit Intermediation 116 42.12 49.43 -0.33212
Department Stores 24 48.10 57.75 -0.31380
Insurance Carriers 82 43.97 49.98 -0.29951
Data Processing Services 25 36.09 39.30 -0.26496

 

 

Table 7 displays those industries from the top 50 industries that have the lowest odds of women being officials and managers at headquarters locations based on their employment as officials and managers in the firm's other establishments. Here the industries are strikingly similar, as they are heavily represented by health care-based industries. However, some of the other industries on the list, such as Depository Credit Intermediation (such as commercial banking) and Department Stores, are interesting because the distinction between field and headquarters activity could be somewhat different. In examining the rankings, it can be somewhat difficult to distinguish those industries where there may be some consistent limitation of opportunities for women managers from those situations where the presumed model of movement of managers from field establishments to headquarter establishments does not capture functional practices. Therefore, the second analytic approach is added.

 

 

Horizontal Analysis

Firms are examined to compare officials and managers at headquarters to white collar workers at headquarters. This analysis recognizes that there are firms where there are unique qualifications for officials and managers at the headquarters facility and that these requirements are more likely to be found among the white collar workers at headquarters than managers in the field. Once the pool and target positions are limited to headquarters facilities, the analysis follows that used above in comparing all officials and managers to all white collar employees. This includes the definition of white collar employees as professionals, technicians and sales workers and the weighting of those job groups based on their relationship with the official and manager positions. Table 8 displays the ten industries, of the 50 largest industries, ranked the highest with respect to the odds of women being officials and managers at headquarters based on their employment in white collar positions at headquarters.

Table 8
Industries Where Women Have the Highest Odds of Being
Officials and Managers at Headquarters Based on Their Employment as
Professionals, Technicians and Sales Workers at Headquarters
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT WOMEN AT HEADQUARTERS MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO WHITE COLLAR
MANAGERS WHITE COLLAR
Legal Services 37 49.75 45.24 0.61157
Employment Services 24 50.37 46.50 0.13853
Scrty & Comdty Contracts Intermed & Brokerage 11 40.37 40.03 0.08660
Telecommunications 53 39.47 42.57 0.04311
Offices of Physicians 22 65.38 76.79 0.03573
Scheduled Air Transportation 14 39.88 45.86 0.03153
Computer Systems Design & Related Services 53 31.14 30.95 0.02029
Business Support Services 85 36.84 39.36 0.00293
Nav/Measuring/Medical/Control Instruments Mfg 30 27.76 31.03 -0.04486
Nursing Care Facilities 49 58.36 73.46 -0.06558

The highly ranked industries here are somewhat consistent in their need for high-level professional workers. Legal Services is the highest ranked of the industries where women make up 49.75 percent of officials and managers at headquarters and 45.24 percent of the white collar work force. There may be some bias here to the extent that non-attorney office managers are classified in the official and manager category. It is interesting to note that Security Brokers and Scheduled Air Transportation are ranked high using either field manager and white collar pools.

Table 9 shows the ten industries, of the 50 largest industries, ranked the lowest with respect to the odds of women being officials and managers at headquarters based on their employment in white collar positions at headquarters.

Table 9
Those Industries Where Women Have the Lowest Odds of Being
Officials and Managers at Headquarters Based on Their Employment as
Professionals, Technicians and Sales Workers at Headquarters
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY NUMBER OF FIRMS PERCENT WOMEN AT HEADQUARTERS MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO WHITE COLLAR
MANAGERS WHITE COLLAR
Investigation & Security Services 29 26.03 43.62 -0.72051
Full-Service Restaurants 72 30.84 49.92 -0.69916
Other Fabricated Metal Product Mfg 32 20.82 33.47 -0.69755
Motor Vehicle Body & Trailer Mfg 14 16.97 26.31 -0.65233
Converted Paper Product Mfg 37 22.53 35.80 -0.64816
Motor Vehicle Mfg 9 29.46 43.63 -0.64132
Elec Pwr Generation, Transmsn & Distribution 49 25.43 36.89 -0.58657
Professional & Commercial Equip & Supp Whsle 29 27.81 39.82 -0.54981
Community Care Facilities for the Elderly 26 56.12 76.29 -0.54826
Couriers 7 28.49 25.02 -0.54308

 

 

The lowest ranked industry is Investigation and Security Services, where women make up 43.62 percent of white collar jobs at headquarters but just 26 percent of officials and managers there. One of the striking characteristics of this ranking is that the two industries that were the highest ranked with respect to the odds of women being officials and managers at headquarters based on their employment as managers in the field are the lowest ranked when the pool becomes white collar employees at headquarters. These industries are Motor Vehicle Manufacturing and Electrical Power Generation, Transmission and Distribution.

 

 

It is useful, then, to examine all 50 of the largest industries to see those areas where the two alternative models are in agreement and where there is some consistency in their rankings. To simplify, the 50 industries were divided into thirds and classified as those having "high" odds ratios (women have high probabilities of being officials and managers), "low" odds ratios (women have low probabilities of being officials and managers) or they are rated between these two categories, "medium." The industries are classified on the basis of the odds ratios where field managers are assumed to be the relevant pool and where headquarters white collar workers is the relevant pool. See Table 10.

It is interesting to note that those industries ranked the highest with respect to the employment of women as officials and managers at headquarters tend to have higher odds ratios for the headquarters white collar-based comparisons than the field managers-based comparisons. The opposite is true for those with the smallest percentage of women as officials and managers at headquarters. Those industries have higher odds ratios for the comparisons based on field officials and managers.

Table 10
Industries Sorted by Percent of Women Officials and Managers
Displaying Odds Ratio Ranking
Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY PERCENT WOMEN ODDS RATIO RANKS
HEADQUARTERS MANGERS FIELD MANAGERS HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR FIELD MANAGERS HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR
Offices of Physicians 65.38 73.87 76.79 LOW HIGH
Nursing Care Facilities 58.36 82.77 73.46 LOW HIGH
Community Care Facilities for the Elderly 56.12 72.62 76.29 LOW LOW
General Medical & Surgical Hospitals 53.60 71.30 72.41 LOW LOW
Other Ambulatory Health Care Services 52.66 63.44 64.26 LOW HIGH
Employment Services 50.37 36.07 46.50 MED HIGH
Legal Services 49.75 46.25 45.24 LOW HIGH
Department Stores 48.10 57.75 55.25 LOW LOW
Traveler Accommodation 46.39 43.01 50.75 LOW LOW
Insurance Carriers 43.97 49.98 54.76 LOW MED
Agencies & Other Insurance Related Activities 42.20 48.07 53.49 LOW MED
Depository Credit Intermediation 42.12 49.43 49.99 LOW HIGH
Scrty & Comdty Contracts Intermed & Brokerage 40.37 36.33 40.03 HIGH HIGH
Scheduled Air Transportation 39.88 30.68 45.86 HIGH HIGH
Newspaper/Periodical/Book/Database Publishers 39.51 38.18 50.55 LOW MED
Telecommunications 39.47 42.09 42.57 MED HIGH
Other General Merchandise Stores 39.34 33.12 46.22 LOW MED
Limited-Service Eating Places 38.53 46.58 51.32 LOW MED
Nondepository Credit Intermediation 37.45 47.16 51.76 LOW MED
Management, Sci & Tech Consulting Services 36.98 35.38 41.09 MED HIGH
Printing & Related Support Activities 36.95 31.13 48.56 MED MED
Business Support Services 36.84 34.09 39.36 MED HIGH
Data Processing Services 36.09 39.30 45.85 LOW HIGH
Pharmaceutical & Medicine Mfg 36.07 34.31 51.80 MED MED
Services to Buildings & Dwellings 35.86 21.41 38.94 HIGH MED
Scientific R&D Services 34.87 27.98 44.71 MED HIGH
Building Material & Supplies Dealers 33.23 18.65 48.87 HIGH LOW
Medical Equipment & Supplies Mfg 32.12 34.93 44.67 MED MED
Grocery Stores 32.06 37.57 45.17 MED MED
Computer Systems Design & Related Services 31.14 32.36 30.95 MED HIGH
Full-Service Restaurants 30.84 29.52 49.92 MED LOW
Computer & Peripheral Equipment Mfg 30.06 26.03 32.94 HIGH HIGH
Motor Vehicle Mfg 29.46 15.39 43.63 HIGH LOW
Other Miscellaneous Mfg 28.60 25.88 46.90 MED MED
Couriers 28.49 24.90 25.02 HIGH LOW
General Freight Trucking 27.95 14.33 47.13 HIGH MED
Professional & Commercial Equip & Supp Whsle 27.81 28.04 39.82 MED LOW
Nav/Measuring/Medical/Control Instruments Mfg 27.76 20.28 31.03 HIGH HIGH
Grocery & Related Product Whsle 27.02 25.02 37.70 MED MED
Aerospace Product & Parts Mfg 26.85 15.33 36.60 HIGH LOW
Investigation & Security Services 26.03 21.01 43.62 HIGH LOW
Elec Pwr Generation, Transmsn & Distribution 25.43 13.94 36.89 HIGH LOW
Semiconductor & Oth Electronic Component Mfg 24.22 20.81 29.85 HIGH HIGH
Converted Paper Product Mfg 22.53 17.98 35.80 MED LOW
Animal Slaughtering & Processing 22.50 19.17 42.71 HIGH MED
Architectural, Engineering & Related Services 21.18 14.43 27.10 HIGH MED
Other Fabricated Metal Product Mfg 20.82 15.59 33.47 MED LOW
Plastics Product Mfg 19.64 16.41 30.31 HIGH LOW
Motor Vehicle Parts Mfg 18.25 13.89 25.25 HIGH MED
Motor Vehicle Body & Trailer Mfg 16.97 15.38 26.31 MED LOW
N = 50

 

 

Relationships Among the Recruiting Pools

The previous section indicates that the top 50 industries can be viewed in several different ways, many of which overlap. Do the EEO-1 data suggest any general patterns in the access to headquarters management for women? This section examines the relationships among the recruiting pools for upper-level management (field management and headquarters white collar employees) and explore how these relationships can be explained by the characteristics of an industry's workforce.

 

 

Some of the key characteristics appear to be reflected in the differences between manufacturing industries with a high proportion of blue collar workers in field operations and service industries with a low proportion of blue collar workers in field operations. Although it would be difficult to prove, it seems plausible that the distinction between manufacturing and service industries captures, in part, some important differences in how employees become headquarters managers. For example, blue collar industries may place a greater priority on operational experience, a culture that values hands-on exposure to specific mills or assembly lines where women may lack that experience. Service industries, on the other hand, may place a greater priority on educational skills and training, especially in legal and medical contexts where women may be better represented.

Table 11 summarizes the overall relationships among the variables in this study using correlation coefficients. Correlation coefficients measure the strength and direction of the relationship between two variables. The correlation values range from +1.0 to -1.0. Values approaching 1.0 indicate a strong, positive relationship, i.e., increases in one variable are associated with increases in the other variable. Values approaching -1.0 indicate a strong negative relationship, that is, increases in one variable are associated with decreases in the other variable. Values approaching 0.0 indicate little or no relationship between the variables. Correlation coefficients are designed to capture "straight-line" or linear associations that move up or down in a uniform fashion as the values of the variables become larger or smaller. Correlation coefficients are also symmetric. The correlation between variables A and B is the same as the correlation between variables B and A.

Table 11 describes selected summary measures for the top 50 industries as measured by total employment. There are three major types of variables: the proportion of women in selected field and headquarters job groups, the odds ratios between the number of men and women in the different job groups, and the proportion of blue collar workers in field operations. To simplify the exposition, Table 11 only displays a given correlation once. The duplicate correlation values in the lower-left section of Table 11 have been eliminated. All of the correlation values in Table 11 are statistically significant at probability levels of 0.05 or less except for two values in the right-most column (-0.017 and -0.181).

Table 11
Headquarters Management
Versus Field Management and Headquarters White Collar
Correlation Matrix

Pearson Correlation Coefficients, N=50
  PROPORTION OF WOMEN MANAGERS PROPORTION MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO
HEADQUARTERS FIELD HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR WOMEN BLUE COLLAR FIELD FIELD MANAGERS WHITE COLLAR HEADQUARTERS
HEADQUARTERS MANAGERS PROPORTION WOMEN 1.000 0.915 0.809 -0.670 -0.726 0.446
FIELD MANAGERS PROPORTION WOMEN   1.000 0.820 -0.654 -0.893 0.316
HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR PROPORTION WOMEN     1.000 -0.459 -0.717 -0.017
PROPORTION BLUE COLLAR FIELD OPERATIONS       1.000 0.518 -0.409
MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO FIELD TO HEADQUARTERS         1.000 -0.181
MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO WHITE COLLAR TO MANAGERS           1.000

 

 

There appears to be strong positive relationships among the target population and the two recruiting pools identified in this study. The correlations range from 0.809 to 0.915. The greater the proportion of women in headquarters management, the greater the proportion of women in field management and the greater the proportion of women in white collar job groups. As a general rule, industries with a low proportion of women in headquarters management have a low proportion of women in their respective recruiting pools (field management and white collar jobs at headquarters). Conversely, industries with a high proportion of women in headquarters management have a high proportion of women in their respective recruiting pools (field management and white collar jobs at headquarters).

 

 

Although it may not be surprising to find upper-level women managers in industries with a high proportion of women, this does not mean that all industries employ women in similar ways. Different industries appear to have different kinds of employment disparities. Industries with a high proportion of women in headquarters management are more likely to have disparities from field management sources and less likely to have disparities from white collar sources. Conversely, industries with a low proportion of women in headquarters management are less likely to have disparities from field management sources and more likely to have disparities from white collar sources. These relationships reflect opposite signs between the two odds ratio disparity measures. The correlation between the proportion of women in headquarters management and the field odds ratio has a negative value of -0.726; that is, as the proportion of women managers at headquarters increases, the odds of women becoming headquarters managers based on their employment as field managers decreases. The correlation between the proportion of women in headquarters management and the white collar odds ratio has a positive value of 0.446; that is, as the proportion of women managers at headquarters increases, the odds of women becoming headquarters managers based on their employment as white collar workers at headquarters increases. In other words, the source of potential gender inequalities tends to shift from white collar disparities to field disparities as the proportion of women in headquarters management increases.

Many of the relationships in Table 11 appear to be strongly affected by the proportion of blue collar workers in field operations. In absolute terms (disregarding plus and minus signs), the correlations with the proportion of field blue collar workers range from 0.409 to 0.670. Perhaps the most important relationship is the negative association between the proportion of women in headquarters management and the proportion of blue collar workers in the field. The correlation value is -0.670, indicating an inverse relationship: the greater the proportion of blue collar workers in the field, the smaller the proportion of women in headquarters management. The proportion of blue collar workers also affects the relative salience of the different employment disparities. Industries with a high proportion of blue collar workers in the field have a low proportion of women in headquarters management and a higher likelihood of white collar recruitment disparities. Industries with a low proportion of blue collar workers in the field have a high proportion of women in headquarters management and a higher likelihood of field employment disparities. Analogous to headquarters results discussed above, these relationships reflect opposite signs between the two odds ratio disparity measures. The correlation between the proportion of blue collar workers in field operations and the field odds ratio has a positive value of 0.518. The correlation between the proportion of blue collar workers in field operations and the white collar odds ratio has a negative value of -0.409. In other words, once one recognizes that the proportion of blue collar workers is inversely related to the proportion of women in headquarters management, both variables have similar effects on field and white collar employment disparities.

While both of the odds ratio measures are related to the proportion of blue collar workers in field operations, it is important to recognize that the odds ratio measures are not closely associated with each other. The correlation between the field odds ratio measure and the white collar odds ratio measure is -0.181, a value that could arise by chance about one time out of five (a probability value of 0.208). This general lack of association can be interpreted in various ways. It is possible that industries might not be expected to use both types of selection pools for headquarters managers. Alternatively, it may be that neither recruitment perspective is appropriate for selected industries. For example, some industries may rely extensively on external hires rather than internal promotions for filling management positions at headquarters. It is also possible that the underlying relationships does not fit a simple "straight-line" model. For example, the measures may be negatively related in some industries and positively related in other industries. In any case, readers should recognize that the field and white collar measures used in this study tend to operate somewhat independently when applied to a wide variety of different industries.

Blue Collar Industries

In order to clarify these relationships, it is helpful to examine specific industries in more detail. Table 12 reports selected statistics for the ten industries with highest proportion of blue collar workers in field operations. Not surprisingly, most of these industries are in the manufacturing sector (for example, Plastics, Paper Products, Motor Vehicles, Fabricated Metals). The percentage of blue collar workers in field operations ranges from 65 percent to 86 percent. The percentage of women in headquarters management is substantially lower, ranging from 17.3 percent to 29.5 percent. Even though the proportion of women in these industries is relatively low, there is always a higher proportion of women in headquarters management than in field management. The ratio of headquarters management to field management in each of the ten industries is consistently greater than 1.0. For example, in the Motor Vehicles Manufacturing industry, the percentage of women in headquarters management and field management is respectively 29.5 percent and 15.4 percent (a ratio of 1.9). Likewise, in the Fabricated Metal Products Manufacturing industry, the percentage of women in headquarters management and field management is respectively 21.5 percent and 15.7 percent (a ratio of 1.4). Consequently, all of these industries have positive median logged odds ratios ranked in the middle or upper-end of the field odds ratio distribution, indicating results more favorable to women employees.

On the other hand, the opposite pattern can be found among white collar workers at headquarters in Table 12. Nine out of ten of these industries have a smaller proportion of women in headquarters management than in headquarters white collar positions. With the exception of the courier industry, the ratio of management at headquarters to white collar jobs at headquarters is consistently less than 1.0. For example, in the Plastics Products Manufacturing industry, the percentage of women in headquarters management and headquarters white collar is respectively 20.3 percent and 29.9 percent (a ratio of 0.7). Likewise, in the Converted Paper Products Manufacturing industry, the percentage of women in headquarters management and headquarters white collar positions is respectively 23.1 percent and 33.3 percent (also, a ratio of 0.7). Consequently, all of these industries have negative median logged odds ratios ranked in the middle or lower end of the white collar odds ratio distribution, indicating results less favorable to women employees.

For blue collar industries, the industry rankings suggest that women in field management jobs are more likely to become headquarters managers than those women working in white collar jobs at headquarters. There are many ways of interpreting these relationships. It is possible that blue collar industries place a high priority on operational experience at the field level. It is possible that managers at headquarters have negative stereotypes about the skills and abilities of women who come from white collar positions. It is possible that corporate officials often perform

Table 12
Headquarters Officials and Managers Versus
Field Officials and Managers and Headquarters White Collar
Industries with the Highest Proportion of
Blue Collar Workers at Field Establishments
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY PERCENTAGE BLUE COLLAR FIELD PERCENTAGE WOMEN MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO ODDS RATIO RANK
HEADQUARTERS MANAGERS FIELD MANAGERS HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR FIELD WHITE COLLAR FIELD WHITE COLLAR
Animal Slaughtering & Processing 86.0 22.8 19.2 46.3 0.376 -0.350 HIGH MED
General Freight Trucking 77.1 28.3 14.4 43.4 0.665 -0.431 HIGH MED
Motor Vehicle Body & Trailer Mfg 75.6 17.3 15.5 28.0 0.122 -0.652 MED LOW
Motor Vehicle Parts Mfg 75.4 18.6 14.0 25.6 0.304 -0.277 HIGH MED
Plastics Product Mfg 74.9 20.3 16.7 29.9 0.243 -0.511 HIGH LOW
Couriers 72.5 28.5 24.9 25.0 0.406 -0.543 HIGH LOW
Converted Paper Product Mfg 71.4 23.1 18.1 33.3 0.154 -0.648 MED LOW
Motor Vehicle Mfg 67.9 29.5 15.4 43.6 1.005 -0.641 HIGH LOW
Other Fabricated Metal Product Mfg 66.5 21.5 15.7 32.6 0.234 -0.698 MED LOW
Other Miscellaneous Mfg 65.0 29.1 26.1 43.6 0.111 -0.462 MED MED

 

 

specialized tasks that are centralized at the headquarters level. For example, many corporate headquarters, particularly in a manufacturing context, house white collar functions (such as human resources, marketing, and long-range planning) not found in field operations. At least some of these specialized corporate functions may have career paths favorable to women (either because they represent what is traditionally viewed as women's occupations or because women have recently entered jobs previously dominated by men). If so, it is likely that a certain number of management jobs at headquarters will oversee or supervise these white collar jobs, producing openings for women to move from white collar to management positions at headquarters. As a result, the proportion of women in headquarters management positions is likely to be higher than the proportion of women in field management. In situations where women are rarely promoted from field positions to corporate headquarters, one would then have the somewhat paradoxical result that the proportion of women in management positions at headquarters could well exceed the proportion of women in field management positions, producing an odds ratio favorable to women (i.e., proportionately more women in headquarters management than field management). By contrast, the proportion of women in headquarters white collar positions is likely to exceed, often by a large amount, the proportion of women in headquarters management, producing an odds ratio unfavorable to women (i.e., proportionately fewer women in headquarters management than headquarters white collar jobs). Thus, in the absence of the data on individual firms (especially the career paths to upper-level management and relative frequency of internal versus external recruiting), one could easily misinterpret white collar recruitment (where mobility for women may be high) as a more serious obstacle to gender advancement than field recruitment (where mobility for women may be low).

 

 

Non-Blue Collar Industries

Table 13 reports similar statistics for the ten industries with lowest proportion of blue collar workers in field operations. Most of these industries are in the service sector (e.g., legal services, insurance, data processing, nursing care). The percentage of blue collar workers in field operations ranges from 0.2 percent to 3.1 percent. The percentage of women in headquarters management is substantially higher, ranging from 26.6 percent to 65.0 percent. Although the proportion of women in these industries is relatively high, seven out of ten of industries have a higher proportion of women in field management than in headquarters management. For example, in the nursing care industry, the percentage of women in headquarters management and field management is 58.2 percent and 82.7 percent respectively (a ratio of 0.7). Consequently, eight out of ten industries have negative median logged odds ratios ranked in the lower end of the field management odds ratio distribution, indicating results less favorable to women employees.

The relationships among the three types of measures (job group proportions, median logged odds ratios, and the rankings for the logged odds ratios) are less clear-cut for white collar employees. The industry rankings in Table 13 for the white collar median logged odds ratio tend to be higher than the field median logged odds ratios. Seven out of ten of the non-blue collar industries have median logged odds ratios ranked in the upper end of the white collar odds ratio distribution, indicating results more favor to women employees. It should be noted, however, that eight out of ten of the non-blue collar industries have a higher proportion of women in headquarters white collar positions than in headquarters management positions. In addition, half of the non-blue collar industries have field and white collar median logged odds ratios with the same sign (i.e., both have negative values).(14) These relationships among the different types of measures are due, in part, to the relatively large proportion of women in headquarters white collar positions which range in size from 34.7 percent to 66.3 percent.

For non-blue collar industries, the industry rankings suggest that women in white collar jobs at headquarters are more likely to become headquarters managers than those women working as field managers. Again, there are many ways of interpreting these results. For example, it may be easier for women in the field to move into management positions, thus producing a relatively large pool of women field managers, particularly in nursing care. Since the proportion of women in field management tends to be higher than the proportion of women in headquarters management, the logged odds ratio statistics are negative, indicating disparities unfavorable to women. Conversely, white collar positions at headquarters may include many positions typically held by men (e.g., in finance or in-house counsel) leading to a lower proportion of white collar women employees in headquarters. If so, the proportion of women in white collar positions at headquarters would be somewhat reduced, leading to odds ratio statistics that are more favorable to women.

In short, while the EEO-1 data provide a powerful tool for screening potential barriers to advancement by women, its application to any given firm or industry needs to be supplemented with more detailed information on actual career paths and promotion practices. Employers might find it useful to explore the findings provided above to examine their own practices.

Table 13
Headquarters Officials and Managers Versus
Field Officials and Managers and Headquarters White Collar
Industries with the Lowest Proportion of
Blue Collar Workers at Field Establishments
Selected From the Top 50 Industries Based on
Total Employment, Relevant Firms Only

INDUSTRY PERCENTAGE BLUE COLLAR FIELD PERCENTAGE WOMEN MEDIAN LOGGED ODDS RATIO ODDS RATIO RANK
HEADQUARTERS MANAGERS FIELD MANAGERS HEADQUARTERS WHITE COLLAR FIELD WHITE COLLAR FIELD WHITE COLLAR
Legal Services 0.2 49.8 46.3 44.6 -0.129 0.612 LOW HIGH
Scrty & Comdty Contracts Intermed & Brokerage 0.3 40.5 36.4 34.7 0.463 0.087 HIGH HIGH
Offices of Physicians 0.4 65.0 73.8 66.3 -0.432 0.036 LOW HIGH
Depository Credit Intermediation 0.6 42.2 49.4 46.6 -0.332 -0.183 LOW HIGH
Insurance Carriers 0.7 44.0 50.0 52.0 -0.300 -0.335 LOW MED
Agencies & Other Insurance Related Activities 0.8 42.3 48.1 50.2 -0.401 -0.369 LOW MED
Data Processing Services 2.3 36.2 39.3 43.4 -0.265 -0.108 LOW HIGH
Other Ambulatory Health Care Services 2.6 52.6 63.4 57.2 -0.652 -0.155 LOW HIGH
Investigation & Security Services 2.9 26.6 21.1 43.7 0.307 -0.721 HIGH LOW
Nursing Care Facilities 3.1 58.2 82.7 62.7 -0.923 -0.066 LOW HIGH

 

 

Conclusion

 

 

The main purpose of this report has been to use data from the 2002 EEO-1 Survey of Firms in Private Industry to explore the status of women in management. The research attempted to develop some new ways of analyzing the EEO-1 data, especially by focusing on potential differences between management at headquarters and management in the field. While there are a number of specific findings, the primary contribution of these analyses of the EEO-1 survey is the ability to raise important problems and questions about gender-based discrimination given the wide variations in the types of firms and industries in the American economy.

Gender discrimination is likely to be manifested in different (and often very subtle) ways, depending on work force characteristics. For example, the American economy has many multinational corporations with large headquarters staff as well as extensive operations in the field. It also has a substantial number of firms with either small field operations or few employees located at the firm's headquarters. Likewise, the American economy has manufacturing establishments with a high percentage of blue-collar workers and service establishments with few, if any, blue-collar workers. While it is difficult to specify the precise causes, it seems evident that management recruitment patterns in blue-collar industries differ substantially from management recruitment patterns in service industries.

This report should provide a "springboard" that will encourage readers to discuss, identify and reduce attitudinal and other forms of organizational barriers women and minorities encounter in advancing to management in different kinds of workplace settings.

Additional Information

For additional information, visit our web site at http://www.eeoc.gov. Click on STATISTICS and JOB PATTERNS FOR MINORITIES AND WOMEN (http://www.eeoc.gov/stats/jobpat/jobpat.html) for sample copies of the EEO-1 form, an instruction booklet and aggregate statistics.

1. Federal Glass Ceiling Commission, Good for Business: Making Full Use of the Nation's Human Capital: the Environmental Scan, Washington, D.C., March 1995.

2. This paper does not address external hires from outside the firm. Such analyses are most practical at the firm level and not readily summarized by industry. It is also important to recognize that the EEO-1 Survey only has data on the numbers of employees in different types of job groups. It does not track the movement from one job to another.

3. Reid, Margaret, Brinck Kerr, and William Miller. 2000. "A Study of the Advancement of Women in Municipal Government Bureaucracies: Persistence of Glass Ceiling?" Women and Politics 21:35-53; Lewis, Gregory B. and David Nice. 1994. "Race, Sex and Occupational Segregation in State and Local Governments." American Review of Public Administration 24: 393-410; Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald. 1993. "The Gender and Race Composition of Jobs and the Male/Female, White/Black Pay Gaps." Social Forces 72(1): 45-76; Carrington, William J. and Kenneth R. Troske. 1995. "Gender Segregation in Small Firms." The Journal of Human Resources 30(3): 503-533; Carrington, William J. and Kenneth R. Troske. 1998. "Sex Segregation in U.S. Manufacturing." Industrial and Labor Relations Review 51(3): 445-464; Weeden, Kim A. 1998. "Revisiting Occupational Sex Segregation in the United States, 1910-1990: Results from a Log-Linear Approach." Demography 35(4): 475-487.; Blau, Francine D., Patricia Simpson and Deborah Anderson. 1998. "Continuing Progress? Trends in Occupational Segregation in the United States Over the 1970's and 1980's." National Bureau of Economic Research, NBER Working Paper Series, Working Paper 6716. https://www.nber.org/papers/w6716

4. Private employers required to file are those with: (a) 100 or more employees, or (b) 50 or more employees and: (1) have a federal contract or first-tier subcontract worth $50,000 or more, or (2) act as depositories of federal funds in any amount, or (3) act as issuing and paying agents for U.S. Savings Bonds and Notes. Single-establishment employers submit only one EEO-1 report, while those employers whose business was conducted at more than one location submit a company-wide consolidated report, a headquarters report, and individual reports for each establishment with 50 or more employees. Employment figures could be reported for any pay period in the third quarter (July through September).

5. See "Section 5, Description of Job Categories" in the EEO-1 instruction booklet at http://www.eeoc.gov/stats/jobpat/e1instruct.html

6. EEOC obtains and maintains EEO-1 reports pursuant to its authority under section 709 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 2000e-8. Paragraph (e) of that section prohibits the EEOC and its employees from disclosing EEO-1 reports to the public. Violation of that section is punishable by fine and imprisonment. Aggregated data are available to the public.

7. Fienberg, S. (1977) The Analysis of Cross-Classified Categorical Data, The MIT Press, Cambridge, pp. 17-18. Also see Agresti, A. (1990) Categorical Data Analysis, John Wiley and Sons, New York, pp. 14-15; Breslow, N. and Day, N. (1980) Statistical Methods in Cancer Research, IARC, Lyon, p. 125; Finkelstein, M. and Levin, B. (1990) Statistics for Lawyers, Springer-Verlag, New York, p. 2.

8. It should be noted that the odds for men and women are a ratio between two numbers. These ratios can become higher or lower for different reasons. A high odds can become lower either because the numerator decreases (for example, women managers decrease) or the denominator increases (women in the pool increase). Likewise, a low odds can become higher either because the numerator increases (women managers increase) or the denominator decreases (women in the pool decrease). These alternative possibilities will become important in the later discussion of rival hypotheses for field and white collar odds ratios.

9. Firms with more officials and managers than white collar workers were excluded as were firms with no officials and managers and firms with fewer than 100 employees. Once these firms were removed, aggregated industries with fewer than 15 companies are not included. Approximately 600 firms were removed due to these screens.

10. Weights are generated by using a canonical correlation of total officials and managers with total professional, total technical and total sales workers. The weights used are the standardized regression coefficients. If the regression coefficient is less than zero or is not statistically significant, the original unweighted values are used instead.

11. For convenience, these other establishments will also be referred to as field establishments, but their actual geographic relationship with the headquarters facility is not examined.

12. Zero employment is a valid response as some multi-establishment firms may operate without a headquarters facility.

13. In private correspondence, Donald Tomaskovic-Devey of North Carolina State University and Alexandra Kalev of Princeton University pointed out the importance of this process and pointed out how EEO-1 data could be utilized to reflect this scenario.

14. The field logged odds ratio distribution for all 50 industries has a mean value of 0.095, and the white collar logged odds ratio distribution has a mean of -0.3098. Non-blue collar industries in the lower end of the field logged odds ratio distribution and the upper end of the white collar logged odds ratio both have negative values. For example, three non-blue collar industries, data processing, other ambulatory health care, and nursing care, all ranked high on the white collar logged odds ratio distribution even though their absolute logged odds ratio values are less than zero (-0.108, -0.155, and -0.06 respectively).


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