Full Citation
Title: Nature or Nurture? Learning and Female Labour Force Dynamics
Citation Type: Working Paper
Publication Year: 2007
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Abstract: Much of the increase in female labour force participation in the post-war period has come from the entry of married women with young children. Accompanying this change has been a rise in cultural acceptance of maternal employment. We argue that the concurrent S shaped rise in maternal participation and its cultural acceptance comes from generations of women engaged in Bayesian learning about the effects of maternal employment on children. Each generation updates their parents' beliefs by observing the children of employed women. When few women participate in the labour force, most observations are uninformative and participation rises slowly. As information accumulates and the effects of labour force participation become less uncertain, more women participate, learning accelerates and labour force participation rises faster. As beliefs converge to the truth, participation flattens out. Survey data, wage data and participation data support our mechanism and distinguish it from alternative explanations.
Url: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1136650
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Authors: Fogli, Alessandra; Veldkamp, Laura
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Publication Number: DP6324
Institution: Leonard N Stern School of Business
Pages: 44
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Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure
Countries: United States