Gender Disparities
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 8, 2017 3:15 PM – 5:15 PM
Hyatt Regency Chicago, Regency C
- Chair: Laura Argys, University of Colorado
Women’s Inheritance Rights, Household Allocation and Gender Bias
Abstract
This paper analyzes the impact of women's empowerment through improved land inheritance rights in India on their own education as well as the intergenerational effect of this reform. Using the Indian Human Development Survey data and a difference-in-differences strategy, we find that the amendment to the Hindu Succession Act is associated with a significant increase of 0.40 years in women's education, especially for those from landed households. Comparing educational outcomes of children whose mothers were affected by the policy change to the control group, we find a significant decrease in boys' education, but no impact on girls' education. We attribute this decrease to treated mothers who are more educated and are better able to assess the higher opportunity cost of education for boys in rural households than less educated control group mothers.Opting Out and the Division of Marital Assets
Abstract
Upon divorce, marital assets in most states are divided equitably, but not necessarily equally. To examine whether decisionmakers value economic considerations, such as opportunity cost, specialization, and bargaining power, we asked subjects to divide marital assets equitably between a breadwinning husband and non-breadwinning wife. Subjects award less than 50 percent of assets to the wife, regardless of her education or the level of marital assets. Men award lower shares, but unlike women, award a larger share to a more educated wife. Equitable division can lead to inequitable outcomes for wives who opt out of the labor force.JEL Codes: J12, K36, D13.
Shopping While Female: Who Pays Higher Prices and Why?
Abstract
Although the majority of goods in developing countries are bargained over, there is little empirical evidence on what types of customers pay higher prices or the estimated price differential. Using data from an audit study conducted in the Ugandan antimalarial drug market, I test whether male and female shoppers at the same outlet pay different prices for the same good. I find that vendors initially offer women prices that are $0.16 (6%) higher. However, women are 18.9 percentage points more likely to successfully bargain for a discount. Therefore, on net, women pay the same prices on average as men. In order to determine the causes, I compare results by gender with results by ethnic group. Results are consistent with a model of statistical as opposed to taste-based discrimination. JEL Codes: D22, J16, O10.Discussant(s)
Maya Rossin-Slater
, University of California-Santa Barbara
Aloysius Siow
, University of Toronto
Terra McKinnish
, University of Colorado-Boulder
Lise Vesterlund
, University of Pittsburgh
JEL Classifications
- J1 - Demographic Economics
- J7 - Labor Discrimination