Discussion Papers no. 331

An empirical analysis of labor market behavior of Eritrean women

Labor market modeling recognizing latent job attributes and opportunity constraints

This paper analyzes labor market behavior of urban Eritrean women with particular reference to the impact of education, earnings and labor market opportunities. Unlike traditional models of labor supply, which assume that work can be supplied freely in the labor market, we develop a framework that explicitly takes into account the notion of job opportunities and observable sets of feasible jobs. The framework is formulated within a random utility setting in which unobservable jobs can conveniently be treated as latent alternatives. The framework can also readily take into account observed restrictions on the sets of feasible jobs. The empirical estimation of the model is based on data from the labor force module of the 1996/97 Eritrean Household Income and Expenditure Survey for urban areas. We estimate structural choice probabilities of being in the states “Not employed”, “Working in the wage sector”, and “Working as self-employed”, where it is taken into account that some women are constrained in their labor market choices. We find that the effect on wages of changes in education level is high; improving the education levels of women greatly improves their wages, which again contributes to bringing more women into the labor force. However, our data do not support the assumption that basic education increases women’s job opportunities. In order to do so, at least secondary education is required.

Om publikasjonen

Tittel

Labor market modeling recognizing latent job attributes and opportunity constraints. An empirical analysis of labor market behavior of Eritrean women

Ansvarlige

Marie W. Arneberg, Zhiyang Jia, John K. Dagsvik

Serie og -nummer

Discussion Papers no. 331

Utgiver

Statistics Norway

Emne

Discussion Papers

Antall sider

44

Målform

Engelsk

Om Discussion Papers

Discussion papers comprise research papers intended for international journals and books. A preprint of a Discussion Paper may be longer and more elaborate than a standard journal article as it may include intermediate calculations, background material etc.

Kontakt