Abstract
This paper evaluates the impact of strengthening legal rights on the types of economic opportunities that are pursued. Ethiopia changed its family law, requiring both spouses' consent in the administration of marital property, removing the ability of a spouse to deny permission for the other to work outside the home, and raising women's minimum age of marriage. Thus both access to resources and the removal of restrictions on employment served to strengthen women's bargaining position within the household and their ability to pursue economic opportunities. Although this reform now applies nationally, it was initially rolled out in the two chartered cities and three of Ethiopia's nine regions. Using nationally representative household surveys from just prior to the reform and five years later allows for a difference-in-difference estimation of the reform's impact. The analysis finds that women were relatively more likely to work in occupations that require work outside the home, employ more educated workers, and in paid and full-time jobs where the reform had been enacted, controlling for time and location effects. As the relative increase in women's participation in these activities was 15-24 percent higher in areas where the reform was carried out, the magnitude of the impact is significant too.
Highlights
Economists have long propounded the benefits of being able to make choices in pursuing economic opportunities
Just as favorable changes in US divorce laws led to positive labor market outcomes, our results indicate that these progressive changes in Ethiopia’s Family Code increased women’s representation in occupations with higher returns
While bargaining positions have traditionally been viewed from who controls the most income flowing into the household, the institutional environment can play a significant role in shaping power and the bargaining position of individuals within households
Summary
Economists have long propounded the benefits of being able to make choices in pursuing economic opportunities. The new law raised the likelihood of women inheriting land (but did not fully eliminate the gender difference), increased age at marriage for girls, and raised their educational attainment Their results are consonant with the findings of Roy (2008) who analyzed the effects of the same policy change in southern India and found that it had a significant effect on women’s autonomy. This paper builds on these results, but focuses on how the change in the family law affected the decisions of women to enter the labor force, rather than on investments in the future generation ( there is some corroborating evidence that this was affected too) This brings in the literature on marriage and intra-household bargaining. Given the fact of gender occupational segregation, these occupational characteristics have some correlation with gender
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