Social Status, Economic Development and Female Labor Force (Non) Participation
Kaivan Munshi () and
Swapnil Singh ()
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Kaivan Munshi: Yale University
Swapnil Singh: Bank of Lithuania
No 140, Bank of Lithuania Working Paper Series from Bank of Lithuania
Abstract:
This research provides a status-based explanation for the high rates of female labor force nonparticipation (FLFNP) and the sustained increase in these rates over time that have been documented in many developing economies. This explanation is based on the idea that households or ethnic groups can signal their wealth, and thereby increase their social status, by withdrawing women from the labor force. If the value of social status or the willingness to bear the signaling cost is increasing with economic development, then this would explain the persistent increase in FLFNP. To provide empirical support for this argument, we utilize two independent sources of exogenous variation – across Indian districts in the cross-section and within districts over time – to establish that status considerations determine rural FLFNP. Our status-based model, which is used to derive the preceding tests, is able to match the high levels and the increase in rural Indian FLFNP that motivate our analysis. Counterfactual simulations of the estimated model identify policies that could potentially reduce FLFNP in economies where the status mechanism is relevant.
JEL-codes: E24 F12 F16 J24 J46 O17 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 64 pages
Date: 2026-02-19
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:lie:wpaper:140
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