Sandra Aguilar-Gomez at the seminar

WinEED seminar: The Evolution and Persistence of Women's Roles: Evidence from the Gold Rush

On July 22nd 2021, we had the WinEED second virtual seminar co-organized with the Department of Economics at Universidad de los Andes. For this time we had Sandra Aguilar-Gómez as expositor.

Ttile: The Evolution and Persistence of Women's Roles: Evidence from the Gold Rush (work in progress con Anja Benshaul-Tolonen (Barnard)).

Abstract:

Does natural resource-led industrial specialization affect women's roles in society, and do such roles persist over time, even as the initial conditions are gone? We explore the Gold Rush in Western United States in the late 19th-century as a natural experiment to answer these questions. We use a geographic difference-in-difference methodology, exploiting the location and discovery of gold deposits and their influence on sex ratios, to understand short-term and persistent changes in labor and marriage markets. Gold mining, through the oversupply of marriageable men with income, increased (decreased) marriage rates among women (men). Women married older men, and fewer women entered the labor markets. In parallel, the Gold Rush created a market-based service sector economy for women. The initial service sector boom rapidly disappeared with the gold, leaving persistent, depressed labor force participation of women and strong marriage norms in its wake.

 

You can watch the seminar here.

Topics
News | 22 July 2021