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Women's education and marriage decisions: Evidence from China

Xue Li and Hua Cheng

Pacific Economic Review, 2019, vol. 24, issue 1, 92-112

Abstract: The faster increase in education among women compared with men has been underexplored. Thus, using Chinese data, we evaluate the impacts of a plausibly exogenous increase in educational attainment on women's marriage decisions. An extra year of education does not change women's decision to marry and leads to a brief delay of 0.12 years in their marriage age on average, which is much smaller than the delay among men. Although more educated women and men both have improved labour market outcomes, which may have increased their patience, men experience larger income growth than women do. Moreover, declining physical attractiveness at least partly explains why the delay is less than 1 year. Overall, the results are more reliable after addressing the endogeneity issue.

Date: 2019
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https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0106.12247

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