The economic consequences of being widowed by war: A life-cycle perspective
Articles
Overview
published in
- JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS Journal
publication date
- November 2024
volume
- 239
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0047-2727
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1879-2316
abstract
- Despite millions of war widows worldwide, little is known about the economic consequences of being widowed by war. We use life history data from West Germany to show that war widowhood increased women's employment immediately after World War II but led to lower employment rates later in life. War widows, therefore, carried a double burden of employment and childcare while their children were young but left the workforce when their children reached adulthood. We show that the design of compensation policies likely explains this counterintuitive life-cycle pattern and examine potential spillovers to the next generation.
Classification
keywords
- female labor force participation; labor market careers; war widows; world war ii