Type | Thesis or Dissertation - PhD thesis |
Title | The evolution of women's choices in the macroeconomy |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2008 |
URL | https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/bitstream/handle/2152/3926/rendalld27625.pdf?sequence=2 |
Abstract | Various macroeconomic effects resulted from the changing economic and societal structure in the second half of the 20th century, which greatly impacted women’s economic position in the United States. Using dynamic programming as the main modeling tool, and U.S. data for factual evidence, three papers are developed to test the validity of three related hypotheses focusing on female employment, education, marriage, and divorce trends. The first chapter estimates how much of the post-World War II evolution in employment and average wages by gender can be explained by a model where changing labor demand requirements are the driving force. I argue that a large fraction of the original female employment and wage gaps in mid-century, and the subsequent shrinking of both gaps, can be explained by labor reallocation from brawn-intensive to brain-intensive jobs favoring women’s comparative advantage in brain over brawn. Thus, aggregate gender-specific employment and wage gap trends resulting from this labor reallocation are simulated in a general equilibrium model. |
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