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Mothers and Sons: Preference Formation and Female Labor Force Dynamics
1K
Citations
29
References
2004
Year
Parental CarePreference FormationNew TypeSocial SciencesGender DisparityGender StudiesWorld War IiPublic HealthSocial InequalityDemographic ChangeFeminist EconomicsPropagation MechanismEconomic DemographyFeminist TheoryHousehold LaborFamily EconomicsSociologyGender EconomicsGender DivideDemography
This paper argues that the growing presence of a new type of man—one brought up in a family in which the mother worked—has been a significant factor in the increase in female labor force participation over time. We present cross-sectional evidence showing that the wives of men whose mothers worked are themselves significantly more likely to work. We use variation in the importance of World War II as a shock to women's labor force participation—as proxied by variation in the male draft rate across U. S. states—to provide evidence in support of the intergenerational consequences of our propagation mechanism.
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