The impact of COVID-19 on women’s labour market outcomes: evidence from four MENA countries

IF 4.6 3区 管理学 Q1 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR International Journal of Manpower Pub Date : 2024-03-20 DOI:10.1108/ijm-12-2022-0586
Vladimir Hlasny, Reham Rizk, Nada Rostom
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Abstract

Purpose

COVID-19 has had various effects on women’s labour supply worldwide. This study investigates how women’s labour market outcomes in the MENA region have been affected by the stringency of governments’ COVID-19 responses and school closures. We examine whether women, particularly those with children at young age, reduced their labour supply to take care of their families during the pandemic.

Design/methodology/approach

To investigate whether having a family results in an extra penalty to women’s labour market outcomes, we compare single women to married women and mothers. Using the ERF COVID-19 MENA Monitor Household Surveys, we analyse the key conditions underlying women’s labour market outcomes: (1) wage earnings and labour market status including remaining formally employed, informally, unpaid or self-employed, unemployed or out of the labour force and (2) becoming permanently terminated, being suspended, seeing a reduction in the hours worked or wages, or seeing a delay in one’s wage payments because of COVID-19. Ordered probit and multinomial logit are employed in the case of categorical outcomes, and linear models for wage earnings.

Findings

Women, regardless of whether they have children or not, appear to join the labour market out of necessity to help their families in the times of crisis. Child-caring women who are economically inactive are also more likely to enter the labour market. There is little difference between the negative experiences of women with children and child-free women in regard to their monthly pay reduction or delay, or contract termination, but women with children were more likely to experience reduction in hours worked throughout the pandemic.

Research limitations/implications

These findings may not have causal interpretation facilitating accurate inference. This is because of potential omitted variables such as endogenous motivation of women in different circumstances, latent changes in the division of domestic work between care-giving and other household members, or selective sample attrition.

Originality/value

Our analysis explores the multiple channels in which the pandemic has affected the labour outcomes of MENA-region women. Our findings highlight the challenges that hamper the labour market participation of women, and suggest that public policy should strive to balance the share of unpaid care work between men and women and increase men’s involvement, through measures that support child-bearing age women’s engagement in the private sector during crises, invest in childcare services and support decent job creation for all.

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COVID-19 对妇女劳动力市场成果的影响:来自四个中东和北非国家的证据
目的 COVID-19 对全世界妇女的劳动力供应产生了各种影响。本研究调查了中东和北非地区妇女的劳动力市场结果如何受到各国政府应对 COVID-19 的严厉措施和学校关闭的影响。我们研究了妇女,尤其是那些有年幼子女的妇女,是否在大流行病期间减少了劳动力供应以照顾家庭。为了研究成家是否会对妇女的劳动力市场结果造成额外的惩罚,我们将单身妇女与已婚妇女和母亲进行了比较。通过 ERF COVID-19 MENA Monitor 家庭调查,我们分析了影响妇女劳动力市场结果的关键条件:(1) 工资收入和劳动力市场地位,包括保持正式就业、非正式就业、无薪或自营职业、失业或脱离劳动力市场;(2) 因 COVID-19 而被永久解雇、停职、工作时间或工资减少或工资支付延迟。对分类结果采用了有序 probit 和多项式 logit 模型,对工资收入采用了线性模型。不从事经济活动的育儿妇女也更有可能进入劳动力市场。有子女的妇女和无子女的妇女在月薪减少或延迟发放或合同终止方面的负面经历几乎没有差别,但有子女的妇女在整个大流行病期间更有可能经历工时减少。原创性/价值我们的分析探讨了大流行病影响中东和北非地区妇女劳动成果的多种渠道。我们的研究结果强调了阻碍妇女参与劳动力市场的挑战,并建议公共政策应努力平衡男女之间的无酬照护工作份额,并通过支持育龄妇女在危机期间参与私营部门、投资托儿服务和支持为所有人创造体面工作的措施,提高男性的参与度。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
11.40%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: ■Employee welfare ■Human aspects during the introduction of technology ■Human resource recruitment, retention and development ■National and international aspects of HR planning ■Objectives of human resource planning and forecasting requirements ■The working environment
期刊最新文献
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