War and Women's Work [electronic resource] : Evidence from the Conflict in Nepal / Nidhiya Menon
Material type: TextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2011Description: 1 online resource (49 p.)Subject(s): Added Worker Effect | Conflict | Female Labor Supply | Gender | Gender and Law | Instrumental Variables | Labor Markets | Macroeconomics and Economic Growth | Migration | Population Policies | Poverty Reduction | Regional Economic Development | Rural Poverty Reduction | NepalAdditional physical formats: Menon, Nidhiya.: War and Women's Work.Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This paper examines how Nepal's 1996-2006 civil conflict affected women's decisions to engage in employment. Using three waves of the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey, the authors employ a difference-in-difference approach to identify the impact of war on women's employment decisions. The results indicate that as a result of the Maoist-led insurgency, women's employment probabilities were substantially higher in 2001 and 2006 relative to the outbreak of war in 1996. These employment results also hold for self-employment decisions, and they hold for smaller sub-samples that condition on husband's migration status and women's status as widows or household heads. Numerous robustness checks of the difference-in-difference estimates based on alternative empirical methods provide compelling evidence that women's likelihood of employment increased as a consequence of the conflict.This paper examines how Nepal's 1996-2006 civil conflict affected women's decisions to engage in employment. Using three waves of the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey, the authors employ a difference-in-difference approach to identify the impact of war on women's employment decisions. The results indicate that as a result of the Maoist-led insurgency, women's employment probabilities were substantially higher in 2001 and 2006 relative to the outbreak of war in 1996. These employment results also hold for self-employment decisions, and they hold for smaller sub-samples that condition on husband's migration status and women's status as widows or household heads. Numerous robustness checks of the difference-in-difference estimates based on alternative empirical methods provide compelling evidence that women's likelihood of employment increased as a consequence of the conflict.
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