Accepted for publication to Economic Development and Cultural Change 58(2)January 2010. Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/647976This study explores the nature of the male marital earnings premium in the context of a developing country in which the payment of bride wealth is practiced. We use data from the South African Labor Force Survey of September 2004 and the Labor Force Survey Panel (2001–4), the first national panel available in South Africa. We show that a robust and positive premium to marriage in cross‐sectional estimations is substantially reduced after controlling for individual fixed effects. Furthermore, we find evidence of an additional source of endogeneity created by the positive selection of men into m...
This dissertation consists of two empirical studies. In the first, I examine William Wilson's "marri...
Studies across diverse national contexts reliably show that married men earn more than unmarried men...
Demographic analyses from 3 cohorts of Kenyan Kipsigis women married between 1940 and 1973 demonstra...
This study explores the nature of the male marital earnings premium in the context of a developing c...
This study explores the nature of the marital earnings premium for African men in South Africa using...
This study reconsiders the phenomenon that married men earn more money than unmarried men, a key res...
The male marital wage premium is the wage difference between married and unmarried men. This paper e...
Empirical research has consistently shown that married men have substantially higher wages, on avera...
This paper presents new descriptive evidence regarding marital pay premiums earned hy white males. L...
This paper uses Australian data from the Negotiating the Life Course Project 1997 to investigate the...
In standard cross-sectional wage regressions, married men appear to earn 10 to 20% more than compara...
The hypothesis that marriage increases men's earnings has contributed to legislative support for the...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This paper provides new evidence on wage premiums for men in relation to marriage and cohabitation. ...
The phenomenon that married men earn a higher wage on average than unmarried men, the so-called marr...
This dissertation consists of two empirical studies. In the first, I examine William Wilson's "marri...
Studies across diverse national contexts reliably show that married men earn more than unmarried men...
Demographic analyses from 3 cohorts of Kenyan Kipsigis women married between 1940 and 1973 demonstra...
This study explores the nature of the male marital earnings premium in the context of a developing c...
This study explores the nature of the marital earnings premium for African men in South Africa using...
This study reconsiders the phenomenon that married men earn more money than unmarried men, a key res...
The male marital wage premium is the wage difference between married and unmarried men. This paper e...
Empirical research has consistently shown that married men have substantially higher wages, on avera...
This paper presents new descriptive evidence regarding marital pay premiums earned hy white males. L...
This paper uses Australian data from the Negotiating the Life Course Project 1997 to investigate the...
In standard cross-sectional wage regressions, married men appear to earn 10 to 20% more than compara...
The hypothesis that marriage increases men's earnings has contributed to legislative support for the...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This paper provides new evidence on wage premiums for men in relation to marriage and cohabitation. ...
The phenomenon that married men earn a higher wage on average than unmarried men, the so-called marr...
This dissertation consists of two empirical studies. In the first, I examine William Wilson's "marri...
Studies across diverse national contexts reliably show that married men earn more than unmarried men...
Demographic analyses from 3 cohorts of Kenyan Kipsigis women married between 1940 and 1973 demonstra...