暴力与女性劳动力供给

Zahra Siddique
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引用次数: 16

摘要

本文探讨了在发展中国家背景下,恐惧和安全问题是否对女性劳动力供给等行为产生影响。通过结合2009年至2012年间进行的具有全国代表性的横断面微观经济调查,以及一种新的地理参考数据源,研究了媒体报道的身体和性侵犯对印度城市女性劳动力参与的影响。我发现,在一个人所在的地区,滞后性侵犯报告的σ增加会使女性在家庭以外就业的可能性降低0.44个百分点(或样本平均值的3.6%)。尽管排除了几个未观察到的异质性来源,我还是发现了这种效应。这种效果对许多灵敏度检查也是稳健的。与女性在经济激励下进行投资以克服恐惧的模式相一致,我发现当地暴力对劳动力供应的影响在来自较贫困家庭的女性中较弱。我还发现,这种影响在高种姓印度教女性中较弱,但在穆斯林女性中较强。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Violence and Female Labor Supply
This paper explores whether fear and safety concerns have an impact on behavior such as female labor supply in a developing country context. The effect of media reported physical and sexual assaults on urban women's labor force participation in India is investigated by combining nationally representative cross-sectional microeconomic surveys carried out between 2009 and 2012 with a novel geographically referenced data source on media reports of assaults. I find that a σ increase in lagged sexual assault reports within one's own district reduces the probability that a woman is employed outside her home by 0.44 percentage points (or 3.6% of the sample average). I find this effect despite ruling out several sources of unobserved heterogeneity. This effect is also robust to a number of sensitivity checks. Consistent with a model in which women make investments to overcome fear in the presence of economic incentives, I find that the effect of local violence on labor supply is weaker among women from poorer households. I also find this effect to be weaker among high caste Hindu women, but strong among Muslim women.
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