Artículo de revista
Cultural Factors and female participation in Chile
Fecha
2010Registro en:
Feminist Economics 16(2), April 2010, 27–46
1354-5701
10.1080/13545701003731815
Autor
Contreras Guajardo, Dante
Plaza, Gonzalo
Institución
Resumen
This article analyzes determinants of female participation in the Chilean labor
force using classic determinants such as age, education, marital status, and
number of children. The results indicate that the greater a woman’s education
level, the greater her labor participation; that older women participate more,
though the rate of growth of this effect is decreasing; and the number of
children that a woman has is negatively correlated to her decision to participate
in the labor force. The article also examines machismo and other cultural
values that influence female labor participation. The evidence suggests that the
more the women have internalized machista and conservative cultural values,
the less they participate in the labor market. Finally, the article concludes that
the existence of these cultural factors as a group more than compensates for the
positive effect of human capital variables and is statistically associated with low
female labor participation in Chile.