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Social roles, human capital, and the intrahousehold division of labor: evidence from Pakistan
Authors:Fafchamps, Marcel   Quisumbing, Agnes R.
Affiliation:Department of Economics, University of Oxford, Manor Road Building, Manor Road, Oxford OX1 3UQ; marcel.fafchamps{at}economics.ox.ac.uk
International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington DC.
Abstract:Using detailed data from rural Pakistan, this paper investigateswhether human capital, learning-by-doing, gender, and familystatus affect the division of labor within households. Resultssuggest the presence of returns to individual specializationin all farm, non-farm, and home based activities. The intrahouseholddivision of labor is influenced by comparative advantage basedon human capital and by long-lasting returns to learning-by-doing,but we also find evidence of a separate effect of gender andfamily status. Households seem to operate as hierarchies withsexually segregated spheres of activity. The head of householdand his or her spouse provide most of the labor within theirrespective spheres of influence; other members work less. Whenpresent in the household, daughters-in-law work systematicallyharder than daughters of comparable age, height, and education.Other findings of interest are that there are increasing returnsto scale in most household chores, that larger households workmore off farm, and that better educated individuals enjoy moreleisure.
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