Mothers and Sons: Preference Formation and Female Labor Force Dynamics
New York University · Center for Economic and Policy Research · +1 more institution
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Abstract
This paper argues that the growing presence of a new type of man—one brought up in a family in which the mother worked—has been a significant factor in the increase in female labor force participation over time. We present cross-sectional evidence showing that the wives of men whose mothers worked are themselves significantly more likely to work. We use variation in the importance of World War II as a shock to women's labor force participation—as proxied by variation in the male draft rate across U. S. states—to provide evidence in support of the intergenerational consequences of our propagation mechanism.
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1,041
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Preference
- Variation (astronomy)
- Shock (circulatory)
- Demographic economics
- Dynamics (music)
- Mechanism (biology)
- Psychology
- Economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Gender equality
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