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CRGE Presents a working group meeting
Masculinity in the Public Sphere: Family, Education, and Communication
Located in Coming Up
2nd annual Global Health & Culture Lecture Series
"A Tale of Two Global Healths"
Located in Coming Up
Center for Global Migration Studies Immigration Reading Group
Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska
Located in Coming Up
Center for Global Migration Studies Immigration Reading Group
My Antonia by Willa Cather
Located in Coming Up
Women Leading Women
Office of Diversity & Inclusion
Located in Coming Up
Ruth Milkman, Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center
Precarity and Polarization: Global Migrants in the 21st Century U.S. Labor Market
Located in Coming Up
Addressing Health Equity Among Central American and African-American Women and Youth
The Consortium on Race, Gender, & Ethnicity, Moderated by Dr. Diana Guelespe.
Located in Coming Up
The Feminist Racial Justice Project of Queer Brown Voices with Dr. Salvador Vidal-Ortiz
The Consortium on Race, Gender, & Ethnicity Presents Spring 2017 Speaker Series. Research Workshop.
Located in Coming Up
Selection on Ability and the Early Career Growth in Gender Wage Gap
Seminar: Labor/Public Finance/Development; Rodrigo Soares, Columbia SIPA
Located in Coming Up
What Women Want: Family Formation and Labor Market Responses to Marriage Incentives
Family structure in the United States has shifted substantially over the last three decades, yet the causes and implications of these changes for the well-being of family members remains unclear. This paper exploits task-based shifts in demand as an exogenous shock to sex-specific wages to demonstrate the role of the relative female to male wage in the family and labor market outcomes of women. I show that increases in the relative wage lead to a decline in the likelihood of marriage for those on the margin of a first marriage, and present suggestive evidence that these effects are concentrated among less-desirable matches. A higher relative wage also causes women to increase their hours of work, reduce their dependence on a male earner, and increase the likelihood of taking guardianship over their children. These findings indicate that improvements in the relative wage have facilitated women’s independence by reducing the monetary incentive for marriage, and can account for 20% of the decline in marriage between 1980 and 2010.
Located in Coming Up