Female employment
rates and labour market attachment in rural Canada
by Euan Phimister,
Esperanza Vera-Toscano and Alfons Weersink
Family and Labour Studies Division
Analytical
Studies Branch research paper series, No. 153
In this paper a dynamic employment
model for women is estimated for rural and urban samples from the first four years
of the Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics 1993 to 1996. The results provide
evidence that there are significant differences between rural and urban labour
markets. However, these do not appear to arise—as is often argued—from
the influence of having children or differences in returns to human capital, or
the existence of more "traditional" attitudes to the proper role of
women in rural areas. The results also suggest labour market segmentation within
rural areas with clear differences in employment for women belonging to low-income
households as shown in the decomposition results.
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