Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
The authors show that for China the movement of more people into better jobs with higher incomes formed a very important explanation for the country's long-term success in growth and poverty reduction. China's exporting cities created a virtuous cycle of new wage-employment-creating investments by new businesses making new products. The rapid increase in urban labor demand drew hundreds of millions of workers from the rural "traditional" sector to the "modern" sector, providing them with more reliable waged incomes. This dramatically raised the share of waged employment in China's economy and unleashed new middle-class demand for more income-elastic goods and services. Growth in urban wages was moderated by regulated rural to urban labor migration under the Hukou system. This raised returns to capital, which maintained business incentives to re-invest their profits in new goods and services for which new markets were opening. Production of cheaper manufactured goods for the world market was an important catalyst, but domestic demand for services in China has maintained the momentum.
Employment --- Employment and Unemployment --- Job Creation --- Labor Markets --- Migration --- Poverty Reduction --- Rural Urban Linkages --- Skills Development and Labor Force Training --- Social Protections and Labor --- Urban Development
Choose an application
This paper incorporates gender bias against girls in the family, school and labor market in a model of intergenerational persistence in schooling where parents self-finance children's education because of credit market imperfections. Parents may underestimate a girl's ability, expect lower returns, and assign lower weights to their welfare ("pure son preference"). The model delivers the widely used linear conditional expectation function under constant returns and separability but generates an irrelevance result: parental bias does not affect relative mobility. With diminishing returns and complementarity, the conditional expectation function can be concave or convex, and parental bias affects both relative and absolute mobility. This paper tests these predictions in India and China using data not subject to coresidency bias. The evidence rejects the linear conditional expectation function in rural and urban India in favor of a concave relation. Girls in India face lower mobility irrespective of location when born to fathers with low schooling, but the gender gap closes when the father is college educated. In China, the conditional expectation function is convex for sons in urban areas, but linear in all other cases. The convexity supports the complementarity hypothesis of Becker and others (2018) for the urban sons and leads to gender divergence in relative mobility for the children of highly educated fathers. In urban China, and urban and rural India, the mechanisms are underestimation of the ability of girls and unfavorable school environment. There is some evidence of pure son preference in rural India. The girls in rural China do not face bias in financial investment by parents, but they still face lower mobility when born to uneducated parents. Gender barriers in rural schools seem to be the primary mechanism.
Access and Equity In Basic Education --- Becker-Tomes Model --- Co-Residency Bias --- Complementarity --- Economics of Education --- Education --- Educational Sciences --- Equity In Education --- Female Labor Force Participation --- Gender --- Gender and Development --- Gender and Education --- Gender Bias --- Inequality --- Intergenerational Mobility --- Labor Markets --- Returns to Education --- Rural Development --- Rural Labor Markets --- Son Preference
Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|