We explore the effect of military fatalities from World War I on female labor participation in post-war France. We build a unique dataset containing individual level information for all 1.3 million fallen soldiers, and find that the tightness of the marriage market along with negative income shocks generated by the scarcity of men induced many young single women and older widows to enter the labor force permanently after the war, especially in the industrial sector. These findings are robust to alternative empirical strategies, including an instrumental variables strategy based on idiosyncrasies generated by the recruitment process of the army
During World War I, the birth rate in France fell by 50 percent. Why? I build a model of fertility c...
Based on county-level census data for the German state of Bavaria in 1939 and 1946, we use World War...
Blog of the Journal of Human Resources.Blog article about Boehnke and Gay (2021), "The Missing Men: ...
We explore the effect of military fatalities from World War I on female labor participation in post-...
This paper explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor f...
International audienceUsing spatial variation in World War I military fatalities in France, we show ...
Using spatial variation in World War I military fatalities in France, we show that the scarcity of m...
This article explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor...
Appendix available at: https://sites.google.com/site/victorgayeco/researchIn this dissertation, I pr...
This paper explores pathways that underlie the diffusion of women’s participation in the labor force...
This article explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor...
One significant demographic outcome of armed conflicts is the influence on the popu- lation sex rati...
Abstract: Low sex ratios are often equated with unfavorable marriage prospects for women, but in Fra...
During World War I (1914--1918) the birth rates of countries such as France, Germany, the U.K., Belg...
We assemble a novel dataset to study the impact of male scarcity on marital assortative matching an...
During World War I, the birth rate in France fell by 50 percent. Why? I build a model of fertility c...
Based on county-level census data for the German state of Bavaria in 1939 and 1946, we use World War...
Blog of the Journal of Human Resources.Blog article about Boehnke and Gay (2021), "The Missing Men: ...
We explore the effect of military fatalities from World War I on female labor participation in post-...
This paper explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor f...
International audienceUsing spatial variation in World War I military fatalities in France, we show ...
Using spatial variation in World War I military fatalities in France, we show that the scarcity of m...
This article explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor...
Appendix available at: https://sites.google.com/site/victorgayeco/researchIn this dissertation, I pr...
This paper explores pathways that underlie the diffusion of women’s participation in the labor force...
This article explores the pathways that underlie the diffusion of women's participation in the labor...
One significant demographic outcome of armed conflicts is the influence on the popu- lation sex rati...
Abstract: Low sex ratios are often equated with unfavorable marriage prospects for women, but in Fra...
During World War I (1914--1918) the birth rates of countries such as France, Germany, the U.K., Belg...
We assemble a novel dataset to study the impact of male scarcity on marital assortative matching an...
During World War I, the birth rate in France fell by 50 percent. Why? I build a model of fertility c...
Based on county-level census data for the German state of Bavaria in 1939 and 1946, we use World War...
Blog of the Journal of Human Resources.Blog article about Boehnke and Gay (2021), "The Missing Men: ...