The impact of European Union austerity policy on women's work in Southern Europe
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Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Citazione:
Gálvez-Muñoz, L., P., Rodríguez-Modroño e T., Addabbo. "The impact of European Union austerity policy on women's work in Southern Europe" Working paper, CAPPAPERS, Dipartimento di Economia Marco Biagi - Università degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia, 2013.
Abstract:
Contrary to consolidated economic theory principles, in Europe (but also in other world
regions), austerity policy has been implemented instead of stimulus measures which
have proven to be successful in crisis associated with credit crunch and insufficient
demand. These policies cannot be only considered as an "austericide" due to ideological
blindness. They also need to be considered as a strategy for imposing an economic and
social reform which proved too difficult to be implemented in the years previous to the
great recession.
The ongoing fiscal contraction policies include the typical adjustment measures which
are now driving the European economy towards a new type of insertion within the
international economy. And as a consequence, they imply deep changes on the gender
division of work deepening gender inequality. This article analyses the different effects
of European Union austerity policy on women and men’s participation in the labour
markets in two Southern European countries beaten by the Debt crisis: Spain and Italy.
During the first part of this economics crisis, unemployment grew higher for men than
for women, but in the second phase with the all sectors hit by the recession and the
implementation of harsh austerity policies affecting public-sector jobs, women are also
losing their jobs at the same rate than men. We have estimated labour supply models for
individuals aged 25 to 54 living in couples with or without children by gender by using
the EU-SILC 2011 micro data for Spain and Italy. The analysis carried out shows a
strong countercyclical added-worker effect for women in response to transitory shocks
in partner’s earnings, in contrast with a procyclical discouraged-worker effect for men.
However though the added-worker effect prevails for women in Spain, in Italy still the
discouraged worker effect dominates. The results show also a positive effect of the
provision of childcare services on women’s labour supply. A cut in social and care
services due to austerity promotion may turn the tendency to a decline in women’s
participation and employment rates in the labour force with the subsequent loss of total
well-being, due to gender differences in education performance, and especially of
women’s well-being.
Tipologia CRIS:
Working paper
Keywords:
gender, labour supply, austerity policy, Great Recession
Elenco autori:
Gálvez-Muñoz, L.; Rodríguez-Modroño, P.; Addabbo, T.
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