In Britain, female labor force participation rose steadily from the Second World War to 1977. To explain this, we estimate a pooled time-series, cross-section supply function for single-year age groups of women. The life-cycle pattern is explained quite well by the presence of children. At a second stage we try to explain the rising level of the cohort intercepts estimated at the first stage. Real wage growth may be an explanatory factor, as cross-section evidence suggests it should be. Finally, we point to the 15% rise in the relative pay of women in the mid-1970s caused by the Equal Pay Act. This did not cause the expected decline in the relative demand for female employees
The demand for female labor is a central explanatory component of macrostructural theories of gender...
Between about the mid 1960s and the late 1970s there was a remarkable rise in the labor force partic...
This paper compares the gender gap in the pay of British, full-time workers from two cohorts, born i...
Rising female labour-force participation has been one of the most striking changes to have occurred ...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
In this paper we study the life cycle labour force participation of three cohorts of American women:...
This article uses a new source of data, namely the full sample of the 1881 Census Enumerators’ Books...
The working-age female participation rate in the United Kingdom increased by 7 percentage points bet...
In this paper we study the life cycle labour force participation of three cohorts of American women:...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper looks at how the narrowing gender employme...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
SIGLELD:3597.444(157) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
A major new study of the role of women in the labor market of Industrial Revolution Britain. It is w...
On Tuesday, International Women's Day, the Fawcett Society published a review of the the progress (o...
The demand for female labor is a central explanatory component of macrostructural theories of gender...
Between about the mid 1960s and the late 1970s there was a remarkable rise in the labor force partic...
This paper compares the gender gap in the pay of British, full-time workers from two cohorts, born i...
Rising female labour-force participation has been one of the most striking changes to have occurred ...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
In this paper we study the life cycle labour force participation of three cohorts of American women:...
This article uses a new source of data, namely the full sample of the 1881 Census Enumerators’ Books...
The working-age female participation rate in the United Kingdom increased by 7 percentage points bet...
In this paper we study the life cycle labour force participation of three cohorts of American women:...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper looks at how the narrowing gender employme...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
SIGLELD:3597.444(157) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
A major new study of the role of women in the labor market of Industrial Revolution Britain. It is w...
On Tuesday, International Women's Day, the Fawcett Society published a review of the the progress (o...
The demand for female labor is a central explanatory component of macrostructural theories of gender...
Between about the mid 1960s and the late 1970s there was a remarkable rise in the labor force partic...
This paper compares the gender gap in the pay of British, full-time workers from two cohorts, born i...