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Oil, Ploughs, and Gender Roles

- November 30, 2010

There are large cultural differences in the beliefs people have regarding the proper role of women in society. A flurry of recent research ascribes at least some portion of this variation to historical material forces that have shaped the opportunities for women to participate in the labor force. We have “blogged earlier”:https://themonkeycage.org/2009/12/oil_islam_and_women_revisited.html about the argument that oil crowds out low-wage manufacturing, thereby reducing the opportunities for women to work outside the home and thus affecting gender roles. Alberto Alesina, Paola Giuliano, and Nathan Nunn have a “new paper”:http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/nunn/files/plough_draft_Oct20_2010_NN_version.pdf that makes a similar argument about early agricultural technologies, in particular the role of the plough. These types of arguments challenge views that cultural differences about gender roles “originate in religion”:http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=6686764&fulltextType=RV&fileId=S1743923X09990365 or other value systems. The abstract is below.

bq. This paper studies the historic origins of current differences in norms and beliefs about the role of women in society. We show that, consistent with anthropological hypotheses, societies with a tradition of plough agriculture tend to have the belief that the natural place for women is inside the home and the natural place for men is outside the home. Looking across countries, subnational districts, ethnic groups and individuals, we identify a link between historic plough-use and a number of outcomes today, including female labor force participation, female participation in politics, female ownership of firms, the sex ratio and self-expressed attitudes about the role of women in society. Our identification exploits variation in the historic suitability of the environment of ancestors for growing crops that differentially benefitted from the adoption of the plough. We examine culture as a mechanism by looking at first and second generation immigrants with different cultural backgrounds living within the US.

h/t “Kevin Lewis”:http://www.nationalaffairs.com/blog/detail/findings-a-daily-roundup/underrepresented