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Women's urban labour market status in developing countries: How well do they fare in Khartoum, Sudan?
35
Citations
12
References
1993
Year
Economic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsLabor Market ParticipationSocial SciencesGender DisparityGender StudiesEconomic InequalityCountry EnvironmentAfrican DevelopmentSocial InequalityEconomicsFeminist EconomicsFormal SectorUrban KhartoumLabor Market OutcomeFeminist TheoryLabor EconomicsSociologyBusinessGender EconomicsGender DivideDemographyLabor Law
Abstract This article examines the insertion of women in the formal sector labour market in urban Khartoum, Sudan, in order to explain their inferior employment status in one particular developing country environment. A number of hypotheses are tested drawing upon recent labour market theoretical developments and econometric techniques from the literature which have had limited previous applications in Third World settings, particularly in Africa. Our findings indicate that occupational segregation, rather than pay discrimination, is primarily to blame for observed wage differentials suggesting that well‐intentioned equal pay laws will do little to reduce the earnings gap.
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