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    ЭШ-ний өгүүлэл

    Social reproduction, gender equality and economic growth

    • Time Allocation and Labor Supply
    • Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
    • Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity

    Abstract

    This paper presents a conceptual Kaleckian macroeconomic model and principal component analysis that link structures of economic growth and development with those of social reproduction and gender inequality. Employment, output and long-run prospects for growth are driven by class dynamics as well as social reproduction, defined as the time and money it takes to produce, maintain and invest in the labour force. How social reproduction is organised—the extent to which reproduction takes place in the household, public or market sectors, and the gender distribution of the labour in each—influences current aggregate demand and long-run productivity growth.

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    Embedding Care and Unpaid Work in Macroeconomic Modeling: A Structuralist Approach

    • Unpaid work
    • Care
    • Economic models
    • Structuralist models

    Abstract

    This study embeds paid and unpaid care work in a structuralist macroeconomic model. Care work is formally modeled as a gendered input into the market production process via its impact on the current and future labor force, with altruistic motivations determining both how much support people give one another and the economic effectiveness of that support. This study uses the model to distinguish between two types
    of economies – a “selfish” versus an “altruistic” economy – and seeks to understand how different macroeconomic conditions and events play out in the two cases. Whether and how women and men share the financial and time costs of care condition the results of the comparison, with more equal sharing of care responsibilities making the “altruistic” case more likely. 

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    Engendering Macroeconomic Theory and Policy

    • macroeconomics
    • gender differences
    • structural economics

    Abstract

    Over the past two decades, economists have turned their attention to exploring the role of gender in the macroeconomy. This paper reviews the salient findings of that literature. Research shows that gender gaps in education, health, unpaid labor, employment, and wages have economy-wide consequences and influence the rate of growth. The effects are transmitted via both the supply side of the economy – principally through labor productivity – and the demand side – through business spending, exports, saving, and the balance of payments. In turn, a broad array of macro-level policies, including fiscal, monetary, and trade policies have differential effects by gender that, if unheeded, can undermine macro-policy goals.

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    Unintended consequences of maternity leave legislation: The case of Colombia

    • Maternity leave
    • Female labor market
    • Labor regulation

    Abstract

    We estimate the impact on female labor outcomes of the extension in maternity leave period from 12 to 14 weeks, an amendment to the Colombian labor law in 2011. To identify this impact, we compare labor market outcomes of different groups of individuals with women of child-bearing age. First we compared two groups of women with different fertility rates (low elasticity of substitution), finding that, as result of the extension, women in the high-fertility age group experience an increase in inactivity, informality, and self-employment. When comparing high-fertility age women with men in the same age group (high elasticity of substitution), we find that the extension increases the probability of unemployment, informality and self-employment and decreases wages of women compared with men.

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    Subsidized childcare and child development in Colombia: effects of Hogares Comunitarios de Bienestar as a function of timing and length of exposure

    • developing countries
    • Child development
    • Childcare
    • Early childhood intervention
    • poverty

    Abstract

    Rigorous evidence regarding the impact of early care and education on children's development comes primarily from high-income nations. A few studies from Latin America and the Caribbean have identified benefits of conditional cash transfer and home visiting programs on children's development. However, there is still controversy around the impact and cost-effectiveness of childcare approaches. Further research is needed to understand how scaled-up childcare settings may support the development of low-income children in Latin America. To that end, the present study sought to identify the effects of exposure to a subsidized childcare program in Colombia on children's nutritional status, cognitive and socioemotional development.

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    1. How Does Your Kindergarten Classroom Affect Your Earnings? Evidence from Project Star
    2. The Economic Consequences of Family Policies: Lessons from a Century of Legislation in High-Income Countries
    3. Care: Intersections of scales, inequalities and crises
    4. Explorations: Time-use Surveys in the South

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