What is it about?
Does job loss affect women and men differently in terms of employment, hourly wages, working hours, and commuting distances outcomes? And does it differ between expectant mothers and expectant fathers? After experiencing job loss, compared to men, women tend to: - remain unemployed longer - experience a slightly smaller hourly wage loss - work fewer hours in their new job - experience a smaller increase in the commuting distance from home to the workplace Other key observations: - the negative effect of job loss on unemployment and working hours is amplified for pregnant women, not for expectant fathers - men who worked part time before becoming unemployed took longer to secure a job than men who previously worked full time, and fared worse in terms of hourly wages
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Why is it important?
Job loss widens gender gaps in employment, working hours and commuting distance but not in hourly wages. The results suggest that women's greater tendency for job flexibility increases their job search duration but does not widen the gender hourly wage gap in the three-year period after job loss. Women's longer unemployment duration after experiencing job loss is costly. In addition, the results suggest women are less competitive in the labour market through smaller job search areas. For expectant mothers and fathers, job loss widens gender gaps in employment and working hours. We show that unforeseen job loss negatively affects expectant mothers’ but not expectant fathers’ labour market outcomes, on top of the well-established child penalty effect. Expectant mothers' job loss can be perceived as the start of a large gender gap in employment over the life course. This research is relevant for policies that aim to narrow gender gaps, as it provides a better understanding of how workers respond to job loss and whether this is different for (expectant) mothers and (expectant) fathers.
Perspectives
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Gender differences in job flexibility: Commutes and working hours after job loss, Journal of Urban Economics, May 2022, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.jue.2022.103425.
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Resources
Does job flexibility impact gender gaps in employment and wages?
University of Melbourne: Gender differences in employment and wages remain widespread in Australia, despite efforts to close this gap. This colloquium will investigate whether women’s tendencies to work fewer hours with shorter commutes is one of the reasons behind the divide not narrowing by comparing how women and men respond to job losses.
Open Access published version
The paper entitled "Gender differences in job flexibility: Commutes and working hours after job loss" is available, open access.
The role of the housing market in workers’ resilience to job displacement after firm bankruptcy
For related research on the role of the housing market in workers' response to job loss, please see the paper "The role of the housing market in workers’ resilience to job displacement after firm bankruptcy".
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