Most macroeconomic and growth accounting models assume that male and female workers are perfectly substitutable in the aggregate production function. Whether this assumption is valid is an empirical question that this paper aims to answer by estimating the elasticity of substitution between female and male labour. We apply linear and non-linear techniques to firm-level data, cross-country sectoral data and cross-country aggregate data. We find that women and men are far from being perfect substitutes in production, a result that is consistent with much microeconomic evidence, but has not permeated to macroeconomics. The failure to account for imperfect gender substitutability has far-reaching implications. In particular, standard growth accounting exercises are likely to attribute to technological progress gains that are more properly attributable to the impact of greater gender inclusiveness in the labour force over time. Put differently, the gains from gender inclusiveness are likely to be much larger than standard economic models estimate.
Air transport is central to global connectivity, but regulatory restrictions impose high transport costs. This…
Governments across Europe are increasingly acting to help industry remain competitive without compromising EU climate…
The long-standing gap in hours worked between Americans and workers in other advanced economies has…
The relationship between defence spending and growth has recently returned to the centre of policy…
Foreign direct investment is a key driver of development, particularly for low-income countries. Nevertheless, low-income…
Cross-border payments are essential for global trade, remittances, and financial transactions, but remain inefficient compared…