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Import competition and the gender gap in labor force participation: Evidence from China
Date:2022-03-03

Author: Zhen Yu ,Xiaoling Wu,Meng Li,Rufei Guo


Abstract: Does import competition explain the gender gap in labor force participation? The distributional consequences of trade liberalization have fascinated decades of economists and policy makers. Using a difference-in-differences strategy, we find that import competition enlarges the gender gap in labor force participation in China during 1990 and 2005. The results are robust to various identification challenges, including contemporaneous confounders, treatment effect heterogeneity, and spatial correlations in standard errors. The magnitude of the gender-differential effects of import competition on labor force participation grows by age , and peaks for people aged 46–50. The household division of labor appears to explain the gender-differential effects. Import competition also leads to a relative contraction of female-intensive industries, and reduces the share of female employees in each industry.


This article was published online in China Economic Review 2021, Volume 69. The journal is a B+ award journal of the School of Economics and Management.

The authors Wu Xiaoling and Li Meng are doctoral students in the Department of World Economics.

Paper link: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chieco.2021.101689