Social Norms and Gender Differences in Labor Force Participation in China

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2020

Abstract

Since China’s transition to a socialist market system, women’s labor force participation has declined sharply. Using data from the Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS) 2010, the authors re-examine China’s gender gap in labor force participation with a focus on social norms. Probit model estimates of the gender gap in labor force participation probability confirm the contribution of conventional factors such as health and other human capital as important explanations for the resurgent gender gap in China. However, even after extensive controls for human-capital differences, the gap remains mostly unexplained in the data. The Blinder–Oaxaca decomposition analysis confirms that the gender gap in labor force participation is predominantly explained by behavioral differences between women and men. Gender-related community social norms account for 41.4 percent of the unexplained gap. The study results are robust to alternative measures of social norms and additional controls for community characteristics. HIGHLIGHTS Recent studies have examined why women’s labor force participation has declined sharply in post–economic reform China, but research on the effects of social norms has been limited. The gender gap in participation remains mostly unexplained by differences in human capital between women and men. Social norms account for almost half of the unexplained portion of the gender gap in labor force participation. Along with expanding women’s access to education and improving their health, policies should promote favorable attitudes toward women’s employment, particularly during times of economic crisis. © 2020, © 2020 IAFFE.

Keywords

Gender inequality, social norms, health capital, China

Divisions

FacultyofEconomicsAdministration

Funders

“The China Model: Implications of the Contemporary Rise of China (Ministry of Higher Education, Government of Malaysia, High-Impact Research Grant)” project UMC/625/1/HIR/MOHE/ASH/03

Publication Title

Feminist Economics

Volume

26

Issue

4

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

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