Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Why is the marriage rate falling in East Asia? College graduate women prefer less patriarchal men, i.e. men whose mothers worked or non-Japanese if they’re in the US; given their shortage, educated East Asian women remain single

Housewife, “Gold Miss,” and Equal: The Evolution of Educated Women’s Role in Asia and the U.S. Jisoo Hwang. May 2022. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WTG_ynawyt2nExsrDEnw9JMkgVvB1gqd/view


Abstract: The fraction of U.S. college graduate women who ever marry has increased relative to less educated women since the mid-1970s. In contrast, college graduate women in developed Asian countries have had decreased rates of marriage, so much so that the term “Gold Misses” has been coined to describe them. This paper argues that the interaction of rapid economic growth in Asia combined with the intergenerational transmission of gender attitudes causes the “Gold Miss” phenomenon. I present a simple dynamic model then test its implications using U.S. and Asian data on marriage and time use.


JEL: J12, D10, Z10.

Keywords: Marriage, education, female labor force participation, cultural transmission.



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