Using the March Current Population Surveys and the 1960 census, this article describes earnings and employment changes for married couples in different types of households stratified by the husband's hourly wage. While declines in male employment and earnings have been greatest for low-wage men, employment and earnings gains have been largest for wives of middle- and high-wage men. These findings cast doubt on the notion that married women have increased their labor supply in the recent decades to compensate for the disappointing earnings growth of their husbands. Copyright 1997 by University of Chicago Press.
The author finds that approximately 21% of women outearn their husbands in terms of total wage incom...
We study the large observed changes in labor supply by married women in the United States over the p...
The earnings of married women have a more equalizing effect on the distribution of lifetime family e...
The large changes in relative wages that occurred during the 1980s provide fertile ground for studyi...
Are macro-economists mistaken in ignoring bargaining between spouses? This article argues that model...
article published in law reviewEmpirical research has consistently shown that married men have subst...
Increases in the association between spouses ’ earnings have the potential to increase inequality as...
139 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.This study examines the impac...
Since the year 2000, married women’s labor force participation in the United States has been decreas...
Since the mid 1970s, both family income and mens earnings have became more unequal. In this study, I...
This paper analyzes distributional changes over the last quarter of the twentieth century. We focus ...
This paper analyzes distributional changes over the last quarter of the twentieth century. We focus ...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This paper investigates whether one’s effort to keep up with the Joneses has any effect on labor sup...
One contributor to the twentieth century rise in married women's labor force participation was decli...
The author finds that approximately 21% of women outearn their husbands in terms of total wage incom...
We study the large observed changes in labor supply by married women in the United States over the p...
The earnings of married women have a more equalizing effect on the distribution of lifetime family e...
The large changes in relative wages that occurred during the 1980s provide fertile ground for studyi...
Are macro-economists mistaken in ignoring bargaining between spouses? This article argues that model...
article published in law reviewEmpirical research has consistently shown that married men have subst...
Increases in the association between spouses ’ earnings have the potential to increase inequality as...
139 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.This study examines the impac...
Since the year 2000, married women’s labor force participation in the United States has been decreas...
Since the mid 1970s, both family income and mens earnings have became more unequal. In this study, I...
This paper analyzes distributional changes over the last quarter of the twentieth century. We focus ...
This paper analyzes distributional changes over the last quarter of the twentieth century. We focus ...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This paper investigates whether one’s effort to keep up with the Joneses has any effect on labor sup...
One contributor to the twentieth century rise in married women's labor force participation was decli...
The author finds that approximately 21% of women outearn their husbands in terms of total wage incom...
We study the large observed changes in labor supply by married women in the United States over the p...
The earnings of married women have a more equalizing effect on the distribution of lifetime family e...