Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth

This paper studies the effects of policies aimed at mitigating discrimination against women in the marketplace on the gender wage gap, decisions to invest in skills, the composition of employment and unemployment, and long-run growth. The analysis...

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Main Authors: Agenor, Pierre-Richard, Karakurum Ozdemir, Kamer, Pinto Moreira, Emmanuel
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/379881543853975376/Gender-Gaps-in-the-Labor-Market-and-Economic-Growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30983
id okr-10986-30983
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-309832022-09-19T12:16:44Z Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth Agenor, Pierre-Richard Karakurum Ozdemir, Kamer Pinto Moreira, Emmanuel GENDER EQUALITY GENDER GAP INEQUALITY EMPLOYMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH LABOR MARKET FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION UNEMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN GENDER BIAS SKILLS DEVELOPMENT This paper studies the effects of policies aimed at mitigating discrimination against women in the marketplace on the gender wage gap, decisions to invest in skills, the composition of employment and unemployment, and long-run growth. The analysis uses a gender-based overlapping generations model with labor market rigidities. Gender bias in the workplace varies inversely with the presence of skilled women (as agents of change) in the labor market and has a direct impact on their bargaining power in the family. The model is calibrated for Morocco. Experiments show that although the benefits of policies aimed at mitigating gender bias in the workplace can promote growth and be significantly magnified through a stronger presence of skilled women in the labor market, a trade-off may emerge with respect to female unemployment when anti-discrimination policies are combined with policies aimed at subsidizing women's training. To internalize this trade-off, anti-discrimination policies in the marketplace may need to be complemented by measures aimed at reducing labor costs and raising productivity. 2018-12-11T18:14:10Z 2018-12-11T18:14:10Z 2018-12 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/379881543853975376/Gender-Gaps-in-the-Labor-Market-and-Economic-Growth http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30983 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8661 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Middle East and North Africa Morocco
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
INEQUALITY
EMPLOYMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
LABOR MARKET
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
UNEMPLOYMENT
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
GENDER BIAS
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
INEQUALITY
EMPLOYMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
LABOR MARKET
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
UNEMPLOYMENT
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
GENDER BIAS
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
Agenor, Pierre-Richard
Karakurum Ozdemir, Kamer
Pinto Moreira, Emmanuel
Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Morocco
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8661
description This paper studies the effects of policies aimed at mitigating discrimination against women in the marketplace on the gender wage gap, decisions to invest in skills, the composition of employment and unemployment, and long-run growth. The analysis uses a gender-based overlapping generations model with labor market rigidities. Gender bias in the workplace varies inversely with the presence of skilled women (as agents of change) in the labor market and has a direct impact on their bargaining power in the family. The model is calibrated for Morocco. Experiments show that although the benefits of policies aimed at mitigating gender bias in the workplace can promote growth and be significantly magnified through a stronger presence of skilled women in the labor market, a trade-off may emerge with respect to female unemployment when anti-discrimination policies are combined with policies aimed at subsidizing women's training. To internalize this trade-off, anti-discrimination policies in the marketplace may need to be complemented by measures aimed at reducing labor costs and raising productivity.
format Working Paper
author Agenor, Pierre-Richard
Karakurum Ozdemir, Kamer
Pinto Moreira, Emmanuel
author_facet Agenor, Pierre-Richard
Karakurum Ozdemir, Kamer
Pinto Moreira, Emmanuel
author_sort Agenor, Pierre-Richard
title Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
title_short Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
title_full Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
title_fullStr Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
title_full_unstemmed Gender Gaps in the Labor Market and Economic Growth
title_sort gender gaps in the labor market and economic growth
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/379881543853975376/Gender-Gaps-in-the-Labor-Market-and-Economic-Growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30983
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