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Title: International trade, the gender wage gap and female labor force participation

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2014

ISSN: 1872-6089

Abstract: Recent work in gender economics has identified trade as a potential determinant of female labor force participation (REP). It is usually suggested that FLFP rises whenever trade expands those sectors which use female labor intensively. This paper develops a theoretical model to argue that, quite surprisingly, the opposite effects can occur. Distinguishing between female intensive sectors (FIS) and male intensive sectors (MIS), we show that FLFP may actually fall if trade expands EIS. When FIS are capital intensive, trade integration of a capital-abundant economy expands FIS and contracts MIS. Consequently, male workers migrate from MIS to FIS, diluting the capital-labor ratio in the FIS. Under a high complementarity between capital and female labor, the marginal productivity of women drops more than that of men. Thus, the gender wage gap widens and FLFP falls. Employment patterns in the U.S. following NAFTA are broadly consistent with our theory.

Url: http://ac.els-cdn.com/S0304387814000819/1-s2.0-S0304387814000819-main.pdf?_tid=00cedd6a-abc0-11e4-aea4-00000aab0f26&acdnat=1422980366_3fe101255018c7ff5fc44fc534d71374

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Saure, Philip; Zoabi, Hosny

Periodical (Full): Journal of Development Economics

Issue:

Volume: 111

Pages: 17-33

Data Collections: IPUMS CPS

Topics: Gender, Labor Force and Occupational Structure

Countries:

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