A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities

This paper constructs and estimates a household-level search model to analyze Roma spouses' utility maximization for leisure, home production, and work. The paper aims to explain labor market gender gaps in a marginalized Roma population with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio, Robayo-Abril, Monica
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/656651600182143076/A-Structural-Model-of-the-Labor-Market-to-Understand-Gender-Gaps-among-Marginalized-Roma-Communities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34484
id okr-10986-34484
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-344842022-09-20T00:11:55Z A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio Robayo-Abril, Monica GENDER GAP LABOR MARKET LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION ROMA MARGINALIZED ROMA UNEMPLOYMENT WESTERN BALKANS HIRING BIAS LAYOFFS FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION This paper constructs and estimates a household-level search model to analyze Roma spouses' utility maximization for leisure, home production, and work. The paper aims to explain labor market gender gaps in a marginalized Roma population with low labor market participation rates (males 53 percent and females 17 percent). The analysis uses data from the 2017 Regional Roma Survey for six Western Balkan countries. The simulation results show that the main source for gender differentials in the labor market is the unequal opportunities in favor of males -- not gender preferences or differences in home production productivity. Therefore, most of the gender differences in the labor market can be closed by providing wives the same labor market conditions as husbands. Counterfactual policy experiments show that policies that increase the frequency of receiving a job offer, decrease the frequency of laying off workers, and reduce search increase Roma husbands' labor participation. Policies that equalize wages induces more wives to join the labor market and husbands to withdraw from it. This outcome signals that the wage gap is the dimension that deters the greatest number of Roma wives from joining the labor market. 2020-09-18T13:56:28Z 2020-09-18T13:56:28Z 2020-09 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/656651600182143076/A-Structural-Model-of-the-Labor-Market-to-Understand-Gender-Gaps-among-Marginalized-Roma-Communities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34484 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9398 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Europe and Central Asia Eastern Europe
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic GENDER GAP
LABOR MARKET
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
ROMA
MARGINALIZED ROMA
UNEMPLOYMENT
WESTERN BALKANS
HIRING BIAS
LAYOFFS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
spellingShingle GENDER GAP
LABOR MARKET
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
ROMA
MARGINALIZED ROMA
UNEMPLOYMENT
WESTERN BALKANS
HIRING BIAS
LAYOFFS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio
Robayo-Abril, Monica
A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Eastern Europe
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9398
description This paper constructs and estimates a household-level search model to analyze Roma spouses' utility maximization for leisure, home production, and work. The paper aims to explain labor market gender gaps in a marginalized Roma population with low labor market participation rates (males 53 percent and females 17 percent). The analysis uses data from the 2017 Regional Roma Survey for six Western Balkan countries. The simulation results show that the main source for gender differentials in the labor market is the unequal opportunities in favor of males -- not gender preferences or differences in home production productivity. Therefore, most of the gender differences in the labor market can be closed by providing wives the same labor market conditions as husbands. Counterfactual policy experiments show that policies that increase the frequency of receiving a job offer, decrease the frequency of laying off workers, and reduce search increase Roma husbands' labor participation. Policies that equalize wages induces more wives to join the labor market and husbands to withdraw from it. This outcome signals that the wage gap is the dimension that deters the greatest number of Roma wives from joining the labor market.
format Working Paper
author Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio
Robayo-Abril, Monica
author_facet Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio
Robayo-Abril, Monica
author_sort Salazar-Saenz, Mauricio
title A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
title_short A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
title_full A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
title_fullStr A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
title_full_unstemmed A Structural Model of the Labor Market to Understand Gender Gaps among Marginalized Roma Communities
title_sort structural model of the labor market to understand gender gaps among marginalized roma communities
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/656651600182143076/A-Structural-Model-of-the-Labor-Market-to-Understand-Gender-Gaps-among-Marginalized-Roma-Communities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34484
_version_ 1764480997411258368