Male and female labor are imperfect substitutes and some sectors are more suitable for female employment than others. Clearly, expansions of those sectors that use female labor intensively must affect aggregate female labor force participation (FLFP). We suggest that FLFP actually drops when trade and international specialization expand sectors that use female labor intensively. This effect arises because expansions of the former sectors come along with contractions of others. The latter contractions, in turn, induce male workers to move to the expanding sectors, driving female workers out of formal employment. Thus, a country that is exporting female labor content is actually substituting male labor for female. Finally, building on U.S.-Me...
In the light of ever increasing international trade around the globe, affecting men and women in all...
Abstract Whenever a country specializes on industries that use female labor intensively, its female ...
W 0omen constitute half of any country's human endowment. In most countries, however, women con...
This paper uncovers a counter-intuitive effect of international trade on female labor shares: whenev...
We study the effect of spatial variation in female labor supply on international trade flows. We ide...
This is a cross-national study of determinants of women's share of the labor force. Previous researc...
This paper describes how the composition of the labor force changes with economic development. It co...
This paper outlines the various channels through which women are part of the global trading economy....
The paper empirically explores the international linkages between gender inequality and trade flows ...
We study how trade liberalization affects formal employment across gender. We propose a theoretical ...
This study examines the effect of trade-induced price changes on the gender wage gap in Mexico befor...
Presented at the GLOBELICS 6th International Conference 2008 22-24 September, Mexico City, Mexico
With the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, Mexico entered a bilate...
The 20th century has witnessed an increase in the female participation force in Western countries, e...
Drawing on various macro- and micro-data sources, the authors present robust evidence of an inverted...
In the light of ever increasing international trade around the globe, affecting men and women in all...
Abstract Whenever a country specializes on industries that use female labor intensively, its female ...
W 0omen constitute half of any country's human endowment. In most countries, however, women con...
This paper uncovers a counter-intuitive effect of international trade on female labor shares: whenev...
We study the effect of spatial variation in female labor supply on international trade flows. We ide...
This is a cross-national study of determinants of women's share of the labor force. Previous researc...
This paper describes how the composition of the labor force changes with economic development. It co...
This paper outlines the various channels through which women are part of the global trading economy....
The paper empirically explores the international linkages between gender inequality and trade flows ...
We study how trade liberalization affects formal employment across gender. We propose a theoretical ...
This study examines the effect of trade-induced price changes on the gender wage gap in Mexico befor...
Presented at the GLOBELICS 6th International Conference 2008 22-24 September, Mexico City, Mexico
With the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, Mexico entered a bilate...
The 20th century has witnessed an increase in the female participation force in Western countries, e...
Drawing on various macro- and micro-data sources, the authors present robust evidence of an inverted...
In the light of ever increasing international trade around the globe, affecting men and women in all...
Abstract Whenever a country specializes on industries that use female labor intensively, its female ...
W 0omen constitute half of any country's human endowment. In most countries, however, women con...