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      Values and Inequality: Prosocial Jobs and the College Wage Premium

      1 , 2
      American Sociological Review
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          Employers often recruit workers by invoking corporate social responsibility, organizational purpose, or other claims to a prosocial mission. In an era of substantial labor market inequality, commentators typically dismiss these claims as hypocritical: prosocial employers often turn out to be no more generous with low-wage workers than are other employers. In this article, we argue that prosocial commitments in fact inadvertently reduce earnings inequality, but through a different channel than generosity. Building on research on job values, we hypothesize that college graduates are more willing than nongraduates to sacrifice pay for prosocial impact. When employers appeal to prosocial values, they can thus disproportionately reduce pay for higher-educated workers. We test this theory with data on online U.S. job postings. We find that prosocial jobs requiring a college degree post lower pay than do standard postings with exactly the same job requirements; prosocial jobs that do not require a college degree, however, pay no differently from other low-education jobs. This gap reduces the aggregate college wage premium by around 5 percent. We present a variety of supplementary evidence using labor market data, worker survey responses, and a vignette experiment with hiring managers. The findings reveal an unintended consequence of employers’ embrace of prosocial values: it offsets macro-level inequality.

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          Identity Regulation as Organizational Control: Producing the Appropriate Individual

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            RELATIONAL JOB DESIGN AND THE MOTIVATION TO MAKE A PROSOCIAL DIFFERENCE.

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              Skills, Tasks and Technologies: Implications for Employment and Earnings

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                American Sociological Review
                Am Sociol Rev
                SAGE Publications
                0003-1224
                1939-8271
                June 2022
                April 13 2022
                June 2022
                : 87
                : 3
                : 415-442
                Affiliations
                [1 ]MIT Sloan
                [2 ]Harvard Business School
                Article
                10.1177/00031224221089335
                fc57ea06-165a-4de0-ab24-95fe50b74bff
                © 2022

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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