Top Banner
Labour force participation of married women: The United States, 1860-2010 Richard Zijdeman (IISH) Valencia, Spain Aula 5, NIVEL 0 March 31, 2016 H-7 The causes and consequences of women’s empowerment
33

Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Jan 09, 2017

Download

Science

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Labour force participation of married women: The United States, 1860-2010

Richard Zijdeman (IISH)

Valencia, SpainAula 5, NIVEL 0March 31, 2016

H-7 The causes and consequences of women’s empowerment

Page 2: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Introduction

Post WW II research shows major increase in FLFP

• So, when did it start?

• How did this change occur?– many hypotheses on change in FLFP

• Level of economic development (GDP)• Reputation (social status)

FLFP = Female Labour Force participation

Page 3: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

U-shape female labour force function

• U-shaped relation between country’s level of development and FLFP:– Higher at lower and higher levels of development– Lower at mediocre levels of development

Page 4: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Left side of U-shape

• Rise in income, due to expanded markets or introduction of new technology– barriers preventing women (social custom,

employer preference)• Reduction in the relative price of home

produced goods• Decrease in the demand for women in

agriculture

Page 5: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Center of U-shape

• No explicit arguments (for U vs. V-shape)• U-shape maybe explained by:– regional dispersion of e.g. technology – slow change in social behaviour

Page 6: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Right side of U-shape

• Improvement of women’s education, particularly higher education

• Improvement of women’s wages

Page 7: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

More in-depth on reputation

Formal barriers:- e.g. marriage bars

Informal barriers:– Employer preference– Social norms or stigmas

Page 8: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Within-family-competition

Within-family-competition– Disruptive rivalry between partners (Parsons ’49,

’54, also see Oppenheimer ’77)– The higher the husband’s status, the bigger the

range of non-rivalrous jobs (lower and mediocre)

Ergo: the higher a husband’s occupational status, the higher the probability of FLFP

Page 9: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Between-family-competition

• Competition between families, NOT within families – Reduce risk of economic hardship (two earners)– Enhance socio-economic position

• But 19th century: few higher occupational positions for women, so women more likely to work when married to lower status husband

Ergo: the lower a husband’s occupational status, the higher the probability of FLFP

Page 10: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

What this papers adds

• Increased time period at both ends• Test of theories at individual level…• Taking regional (state) variation into account• Census data: comparability of different age

groups and characteristics

Page 11: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Data

• IPUMS USA census data 1860-2000– 1, 5 or 10 per cent samples– 1970 excluded (for now)

• 2010 + 2013: American Community Survey• married women whose husband is in the

household at time of the census• N = 11,773,133• NHGIS: for total population at state level• GDP in GK dollars from CLIO-INFRA

Page 12: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Key variables

Micro (individual):• Status husband (Duncan SEI)• Family size• # children under age 5

Macro (state by census year):• Proportion of couples living at a farm• Population per million• Proportion in education (5-16)• Proportion in education (16-20)

Page 13: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Methods

• Hierarchical generalized linear model (binomial)– Nested observations– Clustering of observations within states and time

• LME4 package in R

Page 14: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Descriptive results

• Regional variation in FLFP• U-shaped curve between GDP and FLFP?

Page 15: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 16: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 17: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 18: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 19: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 20: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 21: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 22: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 23: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 24: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 25: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 26: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 27: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010
Page 28: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Summary of regional descriptives

• From ‘random’ (1860 – 1880)• To horse shoe (1900 – 1930)• To coasts (1940 – 1960)• To Great Lakes (1980-2000)• To ‘random’ (2010)?

Page 29: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

U-shaped?

Page 30: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Explanatory results

Model with just time and cubic time effect:• Non-linear effect indeed• Bottom of U at 1820, not 1920 (Goldin 1994)

Page 31: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Explanatory results

Random effects:Variance: 0.2815 Std.Dev. Std.Dev: 0.5305 Number of obs: 11773133, groups: stime, 655

AIC BIC logLik deviance df.resid 11742052 11742224 -5871014 11742028 11773121

Page 32: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Conclusions

• On national level no evidence for U-shape• Mechanisms underlying the U-shape appear

to be correct though:– Inverse relation between FLFP and agriculture– Increased FLFP with higher secondary education• but: ‘white collar work’ or ‘cultural indicator’

– Inconclusive results for within or between family status hypotheses

Page 33: Labour force participation of married women, US 1860-2010

Caveats

• Different definitions of and instructions on ‘being in the labor force’ over time– starting age– e.g. 1910 census data

• So far rather imprecise measures: – e.g. no sectorial information used

• No information on income -> SSHA 2016