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Published in: Social Indicators Research 1/2014

01-10-2014

Measuring Advances in Equality of Opportunity: The Changing Gender Gap in Educational Attainment in Canada in the Last Half Century

Authors: Gordon Anderson, Teng Wah Leo, Robert Muelhaupt

Published in: Social Indicators Research | Issue 1/2014

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Abstract

The notion of Equality of Opportunity (EO) has pervaded much of economic and social justice policy over the last half century in conveying a sense of liberation from the circumstances that constrain an individual’s ability to achieve it, and it has been a cornerstone of many gender equality programs. However unequivocal pursuit of the so called “Luck Egalitarianism” imperative has met with many critics who question why individuals who are blessed with good circumstances would wish to be “liberated” from them. This has led to a more qualified pursuit of Equal Opportunity which adds an additional proviso—that no circumstance group should be made worse off by such a policy or decentralized private initiative. Indeed observed practices, by focusing on the opportunities of the poorly endowed in circumstance, do accord with such a qualified Equal Opportunity mandate. Here it is contended that, because of the asymmetric nature of such a policy or initiative, existing empirical techniques will not fully capture the progress made toward an EO goal. Hence a new technique is introduced and employed in examining progress toward such a Qualified Equal Opportunity (QEO) Objective in the context of the educational attainments of Canadian males and females born between the 1920s and the 1970s (In the early part of that century, females did not perform as well as males educationally, and were much more constrained by their parental educational circumstance). A QEO goal is generally found to cohere with the data with females becoming less attached to their parental educational circumstance, and indeed surpassing males in their educational attainments.

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Footnotes
1
See Arneson (1989), Cohen (1989), Dworkin (1981a), Dworkin (1981b) and Dworkin (2000).
 
2
See for example Bowles et al. (2005) and Corak (2004), and references therein.
 
3
Indeed the pursuit of an equal opportunity goal has not been unequivocal, Anderson (1999), Cavanagh (2002), Hurley (1993) and Swift (2005) expresses some philosophical reservations, while Jencks and Tach (2006) question whether an equal opportunity imperative should require the elimination of “… all sources of economic resemblance between parents and children. Specifically … (it) … does not require that society eliminate the effects of either inherited differences in ability or inherited values regarding the importance of economic success relative to other goals”. In a similar vein, Dardanoni et al. (2006) question how demanding the pursuit of equal opportunity should be in terms of the feasibility of such a pursuit.
 
4
As a matter of casual empiricism, equal opportunity programs observed in “Liberal” societies do seem to be of this flavour. For example, when questioned on the widening gap between the rich and poor, the British Prime Minister responded that “… the issue is not in fact whether the very richest person ends up being richer. The issue is the poorest person is given the chance they don’t otherwise have. The most important thing is to level up, not level down”. Interview with the Prime Minister on BBC News Newsnight on June 4, 2001. Transcript available from http://​news.​bbc.​co.​uk/​2/​hi/​events/​newsnight/​1372220.​stm.
 
5
Title IX of the Education Amendment Act of 1972 addressed discrimination with respect to gender in education. Modeled on Title IV an earlier anti-racial discrimination 1964 act, the preamble to Title IX declared that: “No person in the US shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination under any educational programs or activity receiving federal financial assistance …”.
 
6
For example, the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation (BCTF), through its Lesson Aids Service, published a variety of kits and curriculum packages with titles such as Women in the Community, Famous Canadian Women, Early Canadian Women, and From Captivity to Choice: Native Women in Canadian Literature. The Ontario Ministry of Education (1977) published a resource guide for teachers called Sex-Role Stereotyping and Women’s Studies, which included units of study, resource lists, and teaching suggestions for teachers at all grade levels (Coulter 1996).
 
7
This phenomena has also been observed in the US, see for example Blau et al. (2006), Buchmann and Diprete (2006), Dynarski (2007), Goldin et al. (2006) and Jacob (2002).
 
8
Behrman and Taubman (1990), Solon (1992), Mulligan (1999), Corak and Heisz (1999), Couch and Lillard (2004), Grawe (2004), and Bratsberg et al. (2007) all being examples.
 
9
Bartholemew (1982), Blanden et al. (2004), Chakravarty (1995), Dearden et al. (1997), Hart (1983), Maasoumi (1986), Prais (1955), Shorrocks (1978) and Van de Gaer et al. (2001) have all produced mobility indices many of which are discussed in Maasoumi (1996).
 
10
This is the same interpretation as that in Van de Gaer et al. (2001) since with the independence structure, the probability of attaining an outcome is the same for all children regardless of their parent’s educational status. The sole difference being the emphasis on joint density here versus the transition matrix in Van de Gaer et al. (2001).
 
11
Since this will be demonstrated in the following continuous case, it will not be reported here, but is available from the authors on request.
 
12
Second order dominance of the counter cumulative density
$$\int\limits_x^{\infty} \left(F_{pre}(z) - F_{post}(z) \right)dz \geq 0 \quad \forall x$$
with strict inequality holding somewhere, is a sufficient condition for E pre (Y) = E post (Y) (Anderson 2004; Levy and Wiener 1998).
 
13
Unfortunately due to the categorical nature of the data employed here this approach cannot be explored in what follows.
 
14
The Overlap Measure proposed in this paper can be adapted to the three conceptions of intergenerational mobility, namely movements across groups, an index of equality of opportunity, and an index of life chances, suggested by Van de Gaer et al. (2001), since each transition matrix has an implied structure on the joint density matrix, which the empirical joint density can be measured against. Further, the third mobility measure for Markov chains proposed by Van de Gaer et al. (2001) is related to the Overlap measure in the sense that it measures the complement to the overlapping region of the conditional probabilities.
 
15
The discussion that follows extends to the full dataset, and the results in its entirety are available from the authors upon request.
 
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Metadata
Title
Measuring Advances in Equality of Opportunity: The Changing Gender Gap in Educational Attainment in Canada in the Last Half Century
Authors
Gordon Anderson
Teng Wah Leo
Robert Muelhaupt
Publication date
01-10-2014
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Social Indicators Research / Issue 1/2014
Print ISSN: 0303-8300
Electronic ISSN: 1573-0921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-013-0490-9

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