Temporary migration as a mechanism for lasting cultural change: evidence from Nepal

S. Janzen, Savannah Noray
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Abstract

Abstract When a husband migrates, his wife may control more household resources and therefore change how the household spends income. Given the prevalence of seasonal migration in developing countries, even these temporary changes could affect economic development. The extent to which these changes persist after migration spells will magnify these consequences. Using panel data on rural households in Nepal, we examine how a husband's migration interacts with intrahousehold decision-making and consumption patterns both during and after migration spells. We find that a husband's absence is associated with a 10 percentage point increase in the expenditure decisions over which the wife has full control. This coincides with a shift away from expenditures on alcohol and tobacco in favor of children's clothing and education. Importantly, we find that migrant husbands resume their role in decisions following their return, but decisions are more likely to be made jointly. These persistent effects are consistent with a model in which households are pushed to a new, more-equitable equilibrium and then are driven to form habits, which, in turn, cause the new equilibrium to stick, thus facilitating long-term cultural change in gender norms.
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临时移民作为持久文化变革的机制:来自尼泊尔的证据
当丈夫外出务工时,妻子可以控制更多的家庭资源,从而改变家庭收入的使用方式。鉴于发展中国家普遍存在季节性移徙,即使是这些暂时的变化也可能影响经济发展。在移民期过后,这些变化持续的程度将放大这些后果。利用尼泊尔农村家庭的面板数据,我们研究了丈夫的迁移在迁移期间和之后如何与家庭内部决策和消费模式相互作用。我们发现,丈夫的缺席与妻子完全控制的支出决策增加10个百分点有关。与此同时,消费从烟酒转向儿童服装和教育。重要的是,我们发现移民丈夫在返回后恢复了他们在决策中的作用,但决策更有可能是共同做出的。这些持续的影响与一种模式是一致的,在这种模式中,家庭被推向一种新的、更公平的平衡,然后被驱使形成习惯,而这些习惯反过来又会使新的平衡保持下去,从而促进性别规范的长期文化变化。
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来源期刊
IZA Journal of Development and Migration
IZA Journal of Development and Migration Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊最新文献
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