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LABOR MARKET PARTICIPATION (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   182767


Does birth spacing affect female labor market participation? evidence from urban China / Pan, Zheng; Jiang, Xiandeng; Zhao, Ningru   Journal Article
Pan, Zheng Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper investigates the impact of birth spacing on female labor market participation in urban China. Employing household panel surveys between 1989 and 2011 and exploiting variations in time intervals between the first and second child, we find that spacing births at longer intervals significantly increases female labor market participation. The effects of birth spacing are robust to various examinations that consider nonlinear specifications, selection on observed and unobserved variables, and the plausibly exogenous instrument. The heterogeneous analysis suggests that the effects of birth spacing are more pronounced in women with a daughter as the first birth, women with late first birth, and less-educated women. We examine potential mechanisms and document that women with longer birth intervals are likely to invest more in continuing education and have better health status.
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2
ID:   187866


Effects of state-led relocation on labor market participation: Evidence from China / Zhou, Zhengyi   Journal Article
Zhou, Zhengyi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The urbanization of China has been accompanied by large-scale state-led relocation (SLR) programs. This paper studies the effects of urban SLR on labor market participation. With three waves of China Household Finance Survey (CHFS), we find that urban SLR reduces labor market participation, on both the extensive margin and the intensive margin. The reduction is stronger for females, and there is some substitute effect between husbands and wives. The reduction is also stronger for individuals who are elder and less educated, and who choose lump sums of monetary compensation. Finally, we find no evidence that urban SLR experience stimulates business creation.
Key Words urban  Compensation  Labor Market Participation  House  Relocation 
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3
ID:   089580


Persistence of full- and part-time farming in Southern China / Brosig, Stephan; Glauben, Thomas; Herzfeld, Thomas; Wang, Xiaobing   Journal Article
Wang, Xiaobing Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The goal of this study is to assess the dynamics of rural households' labor market participation in the wake of China's efforts to develop rural labor markets in a manner that is conducive to its transition to a market economy. Based on a theoretical model that emphasizes the impact of duration, i.e. of the number of years households spent part-time farming or full-time farming, respectively, we investigate the shifts between these two states. We also identify socioeconomic factors that determine these shifts. The empirical study is based on discrete time hazard approaches, using micro-level panel data from Zhejiang, Hubei, and Yunnan provinces from 1995 to 2002.
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