Shocking Labor Supply: A Reassessment of the Role of World War Ii on U.S. Women&Apos;S Labor Supply

C. Goldin, Claudia Olivetti
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引用次数: 104

Abstract

The most prominent feature of the female labor force across the past hundred years is its enormous growth. But many believe that the increase was discontinuous. Our purpose is to identify the short- and long-run impacts of WWII on the labor supply of women who were currently married in 1950 and 1960. We use mobilization rates for various groups of men (by age, race, fatherhood) to see whether there was a wartime impact. We find that an aggregate mobilization rate produces the largest and most robust impacts on both weeks worked and the labor force participation of married white (non-farm) women. The impact, moreover, was experienced primarily by women in the top half of the education distribution. Women who were married but without children during WWII were the group most impacted by the mobilization rate in 1950, although by 1960 WWII still influenced the labor supply decisions of them as well as those with children during WWII. We end the paper with a resolution between the watershed and revisionist views of the role of WWII on female labor supply.
令人震惊的劳动力供给:对第二次世界大战对美国妇女劳动力供给作用的重新评估
在过去的一百年里,女性劳动力最突出的特征是其巨大的增长。但许多人认为,这种增长是不连续的。我们的目的是确定第二次世界大战对1950年和1960年结婚的妇女的劳动力供应的短期和长期影响。我们使用不同男性群体的动员率(按年龄、种族、父亲身份)来观察战争是否有影响。我们发现,总动员率对已婚白人(非农业)妇女的工作周数和劳动力参与都产生了最大和最强劲的影响。此外,受影响的主要是处于教育分配上半部分的妇女。二战期间已婚但没有孩子的妇女是1950年受动员率影响最大的群体,尽管到1960年二战仍然影响着她们以及二战期间有孩子的妇女的劳动力供应决策。最后,我们对二战对女性劳动力供给的影响的分水岭观点和修正主义观点进行了解决。
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