The Economic Determinants of Marriage | Demos

Men near the bottom of the ladder have seen their earnings and economic status collapse. This has made them less attractive mates, both because of the earnings collapse itself and some of its likely secondary effects. Diminished capacity to support others, especially relative to a normal standard of living, might also cause them to find relationships less attractive or even humiliating.

Women across the board have seen their economic prospects improve. This has made them more capable of escaping or avoiding miserable and abusive relationships, which are much more common on the bottom.

via The Economic Determinants of Marriage | Demos.

The explosion in women’s professional education just after the pill became widely available

Source: whitehouse.gov

Richard Posner on libertarian scepticism about law as an engine of women’s liberation

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How are women doing in the US when it comes to political & business leadership positions

The division of labour between modern parents

Notice that mothers spent about 30 hours per week on housework in the 1960s. The engines of liberation were smaller families and the availability of a large number of labour saving household white goods, and preprepared and takeaway food.

SDT-2013-03-Modern-Parenthood-38

SDT-2013-03-Modern-Parenthood-34

SDT-2013-03-Modern-Parenthood-39

The labour force participation of mothers in the 20th century

First, work changed to offer more jobs to women. Farming declined sharply; industrial jobs peaked and then declined. Brawn became less important; precise skills, learning, and personal service became more important.

The new economy generated millions of white-collar and “pink-collar” jobs that seemed “suited” to women. That cannot be the full story, of course; women also took over many jobs that had once been men’s, such as teaching and secretarial work.

Second, mothers responded to those job opportunities. Some took jobs because the extra income could help families buy cars, homes, furnishings, and so on. Some took jobs because the family needed their income to make up for husbands’ stagnating wages (a noteworthy trend after the 1970s). And some took jobs because they sought personal fulfilment in the world of work.

via Why Did Married Mothers Go To Work? » Sociological Images.

Women and Minorities in Human History

Richard Posner described the engines of women’s liberation

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Claudia Goldin and the power of the pill

Claudia Goldin has documented well that the availability of reliable contraception in the late 1960s led to an explosion in female investment in higher education, and in particular, long duration professional educations.

Although rapidly disseminated among married women once it came on the market in 1960, the pill at first was almost inaccessible to single females, due to the prevailing state laws on prescriptions of drugs.

Liberalisation of availability for single females was on a state-by-state basis and was staggered over a few years. This allowed Claudia Goldin to study what happened to investment in professional education by young women in each of those states as they reformed their laws on the dispensing of contraception to single females.

As contraception was made lawful for single women on a state-by-state basis in the USA in the late 60s and 1970s, young women started investing in long duration professional educations at an explosive rate. They stayed in high school the longer, more young women went on to college, and more of these college female students majored in long duration professional degrees.

In the 1960s, it was common to get engaged and even marry while at college in the USA. As Claudia Goldin, and her co-author Larry Katz explain:

It was a stark choice, you could be celibate, get your career started, and potentially face a very thin marriage market once you were done.

Or, you could have fun, get married earlier, and not necessarily have a career.

The availability of the pill allowed  college-age women to have certainty in their career investments and therefore the payoff of investing in professional educations was much greater.

Participation Rates Women

By decoupling sex for marriage, women could afford to defer marriage and shop around looking for better partners. Postponing marriage for at least a few years didn’t mean all the “good guys” would be taken. In addition, with higher career incomes for female college graduates, as Goldin explained:

You might think of it as the decline of the trophy wife, as women with careers who might not be as intrinsically good-looking became more highly valued than—or at least as equally valued as—women for whom appearance was a primary asset.

But as Goldin’s co-author Larry Katz explained:

Potential losers in this equation, in addition to trophy wives, are women with poor career prospects.

The clear winners are women with careers and, of course, the men they marry… Guys have more money, more sex, and less responsibility.

One side effect of the availability of contraception to better educated women was that young women with poor career prospects were also left with a pool of more unattractive men to marry.

Many of these young women who wanted to have  baby chose just to have the child, and perhaps marry the father later if the responsibilities of fatherhood turned him into marriage material.

This reversal in order of parenthood and marriage  among less well educated young women was one of the surprising social developments in the mid to late 20th century.

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