Posted on 02/10/2018 2:39:04 PM PST by nickcarraway
Men and women Uber drivers prefer different locations and hours. REMY GABALDA/AFP/Getty Images
Economists at Stanford University and the University of Chicago conducted an unprecedented study recently on the pay equality between men and women in the gig economy, where workers get to pick their own hours and get paid by project, instead of a fixed salary.
The study sampled workers from one of the largest gig platforms of todayUber.
After tracking 1.8 million drivers (for Uber X and Uber Pool) nationally from January 2015 to March 2017, researchers found that male drivers, on average, make seven percent more than female drivers.
Curiously, the economists who conducted the study said discrimination had absolutely nothing to do with the pay gap.
And yet, the seven percent pay gap stays roughly in line with the overall pay gap across all industries, including traditional professions.
Independent work platforms like Uber dont typically have a structural gender-based discrimination against workers. Uber drivers are paid simply by the distance and time they drive, with the help of a gender-blind algorithm. In addition, the study noticed no gender preference on the Uber riders side.
However, differences in working styles between men and women contributed to the pay gap. The study summarized the findings in three factors.
First is the locations where Uber drivers pick up passengers. Uber algorithms allow drivers to charge higher rates in high-demand areas and during certain times, such as rush hours. The study found that men tend to work in more lucrative places like airports and city centers.
Airport trips tend to be the most profitable trips on the Uber platform. So what you have is that men tend to complete more airport trips than women complete, John A. List, an economist at the University of Chicago, who co-conducted the study, said on a Freakonomics radio program on Tuesday.
Men and women prefer different work hours, but time plays a less critical role in determining income. For example, while men tend to drive more late-night trips, women do more Sunday afternoon trips. Both are equally profitable hours, according to the study.
Experience is another factor.
In Ubers case, that would be the number of trips a driver has completed. The study shows that a driver with more than 2,500 lifetime trips completed earns 14 percent more per hour than a driver who has completed fewer than 100 trips, because an experienced driver knows better about when and where to pick up passengers, as well as how to strategically accept and reject ride requests.
Researchers noted that there is no difference in learning speed between men and women.
A man and a woman in the data who have done the same number of trips will have accumulated the same amount of learning, said Johnathan Hall, head of the public policy and economics team at Uber.
Last and the most surprising, men earn more simply because they drive faster!
In fact, speed accounts for half of the pay gap.
So men happen to just drive a little bit faster, and because driving a little bit faster gets you to finish your trips that much quicker, and get on to the next trip, you can fit more trips in an hour, and you end up with a higher amount of pay, said Rebecca Diamond, an economics professor at Stanford University.
A few other interesting takeaways from the study:
On average, an Uber driver makes $375 a week and $21 per hour.
Overall, 27 percent of Uber drivers are women.
More than 65 percent of those who start driving are no longer active on Uber six months later.
It’s not fair that men drive faster than women and are willing to go where the fares are the highest!
Generally women create and maintain the pay gap by choosing to not do what men are willing to do. Doesn’t matter the profession.
If you choose not to run with the big dogs, you get porch pay.
And that’s the Uber-and-Under. Badoom tish.
Here is the correct interpretation.
Men drive faster than women and therefore make more fares than women in the same time period. But more importantly, men are busy plotting to monopolize fares from areas that are more profitable, so as to oppress women and force them back home where they will be utterly dependent, perform only menial housework and breed at their owner’s desire.
Oh, yes! Women of color and LGBTQs affected most!
Curiously?
The author of this piece needs a full brain flush if he thinks this is curious. I've never used Uber, but I'm pretty sure the app doesn't give users the option to call a male or a female driver. If ride generation is sex-neutral, it's hard to see how "discrimination" could enter the equation even on the absurd hypothesis that someone would want to do so.
As with probably 90+% of the “pay gap” . . . it’s due to other factors besides discrimination.
However, differences in working styles between men and women contributed to the pay gap. The study summarized the findings in three factors.
How is that 'curious?' The author inserts that emotional bias and then debunks it with the facts.
I'm going to make a completely sexist, misogynistic and trans-phobic assumption based on the name Sissi that the author is a she.
Women have to stop and make sammichs more often than men.
It’s HARD to drive and apply your make-up in the rear-view mirror!
(Though, I guess, now-a-days it could be Snowflake Males doing that, too!)
*SMIRK*
In this day and age maybe.
Why curious? That's pretty much the case wherever there's a discrepancy. Unless you mean curious that they'd actually admit it.
Or a ze, or a xe, or a shiz, or whatever the “proper” term is these days.
Who knows for sure what it is? It might identify as a parakeet for all I know.
This simply must be stopped! How outrageous.
And yet, the seven percent pay gap stays roughly in line with the overall pay gap across all industries, including traditional professions.
Stopped reading here. A study was done of Engineers who entered the work force in 1974. Female Engineers who NEVER LEFT THE WORK FORCE made the same money the men did. Period.
Could be a cross-dressing self-mutilator.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.