Author (Person) | Djankov, Simeon, Goldberg, Pinelopi Koujianou, Hyland, Marie, Zhang, Eva (Yiwen) |
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Publisher | Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) |
Series Title | PIIE Policy Briefs |
Series Details | 21-8, Number 8 |
Publication Date | April 2021 |
Content Type | Research Paper |
Summary: Despite many significant gains by women in the paid workforce in recent decades, the percentage of women participating in the labour force has remained lower than the percentage of male participants. Now, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the global economic downturn it precipitated, the gap in labour force participation between men and women in some economies has actually widened, with potentially damaging repercussions for women’s career prospects and pay. The pandemic has disproportionately affected sectors employing more women, such as retail stores, restaurants, and the hotel and hospitality business. An increase in family caregiving responsibilities because of school and childcare closures has also fallen on working mothers' shoulders. Both factors have pulled women out of the labour force. The authors track trends in male and female labour force participation in 43 countries and find substantial differences across countries in the way women’s participation has been affected relative to that of men. In some countries, such as Colombia, Chile, and Cyprus, the gender gap in labour force participation widened the most during the pandemic. The gender gap also widened in the United States, driving 2.5 million women from their jobs in what Vice President Kamala Harris called a “national emergency” for women. In other economies, such as Luxembourg and Lithuania, the gender gap in labour force participation, unexpectedly, shrank during the early period of the pandemic. On average, female employees have fared better in countries where women are less concentrated in the services sector, less likely to be employed as temporary workers, and where laws supported greater equality at the onset of the crisis. Greater government expenditure on childcare in the pre-COVID-19 era, however, does not appear to have insulated female workers from the damaging repercussions of the pandemic. |
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Source Link |
Link to Main Source
https://www.piie.com/publications/policy-briefs/evolving-gender-gap-labor-force-participation-during-covid-19
Alternative sources
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Subject Categories | Employment and Social Affairs |
Subject Tags | Gender Equality, Labour Market |
Keywords | COVID-19 (Coronavirus) |