feat(data): Extract Broadway2020
This commit is contained in:
parent
2a3d282587
commit
6e8a7f2a1f
2 changed files with 48 additions and 1 deletions
46
02-data/intermediate/relevant/Broadway2020.yml
Normal file
46
02-data/intermediate/relevant/Broadway2020.yml
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
|
|||
author: Broadway, B., Kalb, G., McVicar, D., & Martin, B.
|
||||
year: 2020
|
||||
title: The Impact of Paid Parental Leave on Labor Supply and Employment Outcomes in Australia
|
||||
publisher: Feminist Economics
|
||||
uri: https://doi.org/10.1080/13545701.2020.1718175
|
||||
discipline: economics
|
||||
|
||||
country: Australia
|
||||
period: 2009-2012
|
||||
maxlength: 14
|
||||
targeting: explicit
|
||||
group: working mothers
|
||||
data: national administrative surveys Baseline Mothers Survey (BaMS), Family and Work Cohort Study (FaWCS)
|
||||
|
||||
design: quasi-experimental
|
||||
method: propensity score matching
|
||||
sample: 5000
|
||||
unit: individuals
|
||||
representativeness: national
|
||||
causal: 1 # 0 correlation / 1 causal
|
||||
|
||||
theory:
|
||||
limitations: can not account for child-care costs; can not fully exclude selection bias into motherhood; potential (down-ward) bias through pre-birth labor supply effects/financial crisis
|
||||
observation:
|
||||
- intervention: paid leave
|
||||
institutional: 1
|
||||
structural: 1
|
||||
agency: 0
|
||||
inequality: gender; income
|
||||
type: 1 # 0 vertical / 1 horizontal
|
||||
indicator: 0 # 0 absolute / 1 relative
|
||||
measures: rtw
|
||||
findings: short-term (<6months) decrease of rtw; long-term (>6-9months) significant positive impact on returning to work in same job under same conditions; greatest response from disadvantaged mothers
|
||||
channels: supplants previous employer-funded leave which often did not exist for disadvantaged mothers; reduction in opportunity cost of delaying rtw
|
||||
direction: 1 # 0 neg / 1 pos
|
||||
significance: 2 # 0 nsg / 1 msg / 2 sg
|
||||
|
||||
notes: child-care costs may have additional dampening effect on rtw
|
||||
annotation: |
|
||||
A study on the introduction of univeral paid maternal leave in Australia, looking at its impacts on mothers returning to work and the conditions they return under.
|
||||
It finds that, while there is a short-term decrease of mothers returning to work since they make use of the introduced leave period, over the long-term (after six to nine months) there is a significant positive impact on return-to-work.
|
||||
Furthermore, there is a positive impact on returning to work in the same job and under the same conditions,
|
||||
the effects of which are stronger for more disadvantaged mothers (measured through income, education and access to employer-funded leave).
|
||||
This suggests that the intervention reduced the opportunity costs for delaying the return to work, and especially for those women that did not have employer-funded leave options, directly benefiting more disadvantaged mothers.
|
||||
Some potential biases of the study are its inability to account for child-care costs, as well as not being able to fully exclude selection bias into motherhood.
|
||||
There also remains the potential of results being biased through pre-birth labor supply effects or the results of the financial crisis, which may create a down-ward bias for either the short- or long-term effects.
|
|
@ -1915,7 +1915,8 @@ does NOT look at specific policy intervention}
|
|||
usage-count-last-180-days = {3},
|
||||
usage-count-since-2013 = {13},
|
||||
web-of-science-categories = {Economics; Women's Studies},
|
||||
keywords = {country::Australia,inequality::gender,inequality::poverty,region::AP,relevant,TODO::full-text,type::maternity\_benefit,type::rtw}
|
||||
keywords = {country::Australia,done::extracted,inequality::gender,inequality::poverty,region::AP,relevant,type::maternity\_benefit,type::rtw},
|
||||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/F626YCPQ/Broadway et al_2020_The impact of paid parental leave on labor supply and employment outcomes in.pdf}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
@article{Brodkin2000,
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue