The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid

Women often migrate within developing countries for different reasons than men and female migrants tend to be very differently distributed across economic sectors as compared to male migrants. This paper provides some of the first evidence on the labour market impacts of female internal migration, e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sharp, M
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: Centre for the Study of African Economies 2021
_version_ 1826260241864458240
author Sharp, M
author_facet Sharp, M
author_sort Sharp, M
collection OXFORD
description Women often migrate within developing countries for different reasons than men and female migrants tend to be very differently distributed across economic sectors as compared to male migrants. This paper provides some of the first evidence on the labour market impacts of female internal migration, examining effects in both the productive and household sectors. I merge large sample migration data from South African censuses with detailed labour force survey data, and exploit substantial time-variation in female migrant inflows into over 200 districts. To identify the causal effects of migration on labour market outcomes, I make use of the unique history of South Africa to construct a plausibly exogenous shift-share instrument for female migrant concentration based on earlier male migration flows from reserves during the Apartheid period. I firstly find that this migration increases the employment and hours worked of high-skilled women (but not men). I demonstrate that this effect is driven by substitution in household work as many female migrants find work as domestic helpers. I also find that female migration leads to a (short-term) reduction in the employment of low-skilled female non-migrants suggesting an increase in competition at the bottom of the economic ladder.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:02:32Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:1406eb66-2d7b-4ee7-9c6b-198b07f75491
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:02:32Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Centre for the Study of African Economies
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:1406eb66-2d7b-4ee7-9c6b-198b07f754912022-03-26T10:17:16ZThe labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of ApartheidWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:1406eb66-2d7b-4ee7-9c6b-198b07f75491EnglishSymplectic ElementsCentre for the Study of African Economies2021Sharp, MWomen often migrate within developing countries for different reasons than men and female migrants tend to be very differently distributed across economic sectors as compared to male migrants. This paper provides some of the first evidence on the labour market impacts of female internal migration, examining effects in both the productive and household sectors. I merge large sample migration data from South African censuses with detailed labour force survey data, and exploit substantial time-variation in female migrant inflows into over 200 districts. To identify the causal effects of migration on labour market outcomes, I make use of the unique history of South Africa to construct a plausibly exogenous shift-share instrument for female migrant concentration based on earlier male migration flows from reserves during the Apartheid period. I firstly find that this migration increases the employment and hours worked of high-skilled women (but not men). I demonstrate that this effect is driven by substitution in household work as many female migrants find work as domestic helpers. I also find that female migration leads to a (short-term) reduction in the employment of low-skilled female non-migrants suggesting an increase in competition at the bottom of the economic ladder.
spellingShingle Sharp, M
The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title_full The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title_fullStr The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title_full_unstemmed The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title_short The labour market impacts of female internal migration: Evidence from the end of Apartheid
title_sort labour market impacts of female internal migration evidence from the end of apartheid
work_keys_str_mv AT sharpm thelabourmarketimpactsoffemaleinternalmigrationevidencefromtheendofapartheid
AT sharpm labourmarketimpactsoffemaleinternalmigrationevidencefromtheendofapartheid