Using new evidence from servant contracts, 1600-1890, we estimate women’s wages in Japan. Women’s wages could only sustain 1.5-2 people up to 1900, the lowest recorded in the pre-industrial world. We then show the gender wage ratio was 0.7, higher than in Western Europe. Despite this, Japan had lower female empowerment for two reasons. First, absolute wages were low, so women were not economically autonomous. Second, landownership incomes were mostly earned by men, raising their bargaining positions. The low female empowerment in Japan could explain the early and universal marriage of its women unlike their empowered Western European counterparts
The Japanese economy differs from other OECD countries in a number of important respects. Though hal...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. A dataset of just under ...
In the decades that followed World War II, the Japanese economy grew at a surprising rate, placing t...
Using new evidence from servant contracts, 1600-1890, we estimate women’s wages in Japan. Women’s wa...
Despite its sophistication, Early Modern Japan, 1600-1868, had among the lowest real wage levels eve...
Despite its sophistication, Early Modern Japan, 1600-1868, had among the lowest real wage levels eve...
Despite modern Japan’s evident economic success, persisting inequality between men and women is stil...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
This paper presents a wage series for unskilled English women workers from 1260 to 1850 and compares...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
This study analyzes how the historical work status of women contributed to subjective views about fe...
This paper uses a new dataset of Japanese village censuses, 1637-1872, to measure inequality in land...
This study analyzes how the historical work status of women contributed to subjective views about fe...
[Excerpt] The number of women in positions of power and authority in Japanese companies has remained...
The Japanese economy differs from other OECD countries in a number of important respects. Though hal...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. A dataset of just under ...
In the decades that followed World War II, the Japanese economy grew at a surprising rate, placing t...
Using new evidence from servant contracts, 1600-1890, we estimate women’s wages in Japan. Women’s wa...
Despite its sophistication, Early Modern Japan, 1600-1868, had among the lowest real wage levels eve...
Despite its sophistication, Early Modern Japan, 1600-1868, had among the lowest real wage levels eve...
Despite modern Japan’s evident economic success, persisting inequality between men and women is stil...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
This paper presents a wage series for unskilled English women workers from 1260 to 1850 and compares...
The Constitution of Japan, enacted in 1947, states that gender equality and human rights must be ma...
This study analyzes how the historical work status of women contributed to subjective views about fe...
This paper uses a new dataset of Japanese village censuses, 1637-1872, to measure inequality in land...
This study analyzes how the historical work status of women contributed to subjective views about fe...
[Excerpt] The number of women in positions of power and authority in Japanese companies has remained...
The Japanese economy differs from other OECD countries in a number of important respects. Though hal...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. A dataset of just under ...
In the decades that followed World War II, the Japanese economy grew at a surprising rate, placing t...