Cultural inheritance, gender, and intergenerational occupational mobility: evidence from a developing economy

Type Report
Title Cultural inheritance, gender, and intergenerational occupational mobility: evidence from a developing economy
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2008
URL http://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:gwi:wpaper:2008-12
Abstract
This paper presents evidence on intergenerational occupational mobility from agriculture to the nonfarm sector using survey data from Nepal with a focus on the role played by cultural inheritance and gender norms. In the absence of credible instruments, the degree of selection on observables is used as a guide to the degree of selection on unobservables ´a la Altonji et. al. (2005) to address the unobserved genetic correlations. The results show that cultural inheritance plays a causal role in intergenerational occupational correlation between the mother and daughter. In contrast, there is no robust evidence that cultural inheritance is important for sons’ occupation choice. A moderate genetic correlation can easily explain away the estimated partial correlation in non-farm participation between the father and a son.

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