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Exports and Women Workers in Formal Firms

Mohammad Amin and Asif Islam

No 9527, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank

Abstract: Theory suggests several ways in which exporting may benefit women’s employment. However, the empirical evidence is mixed and limited, especially for developing countries. This paper uses firm-level survey data for 91 developing countries to estimate the relationship between exporting and the share of women workers at the firm. The analysis pays close attention to endogeneity concerns. First, it proxies a given firms’ exports by the average exports of all other firms in the same country-year-industry cell. Second, it exploits the repeated cross-section nature of the data and analyzes how changes over time in exporting activity are associated with changes in the share of women workers. The strategy is more immune to endogeneity problems than pure cross-section regressions. Third, it tests several mechanism or mediating factors as predicted by the theory through which exporting impacts women’s employment prospects. The predictions are confirmed in the data, an unlikely scenario if exports were a mere proxy for other correlated drivers of women’s employment. The results show a large, positive impact of higher exports on the share of women workers. A conservative estimate is that for each percentage point increase in the ratio of exports to total sales, the share of women workers increases by 0.16 percentage point. Consistent with the theoretical predictions, this positive relationship is much larger (more positive) in industries that rely more on women workers, in country-industry pairs where competitive pressure is largely from international markets in comparison to less competitive domestic markets, when social attitudes and labor laws are more favorable toward women’s work, and when the law and order situation is more business friendly.

Keywords: Labor Markets; Gender and Development; International Trade and Trade Rules; Legal Reform; Legislation; Judicial System Reform; Labor Law; Legal Products; Social Policy; Regulatory Regimes; Labor&Employment Law (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021-01-27
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)

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