Does the digital economy generate a gender dividend for female employment? Evidence from China |
| |
Institution: | 1. School of Economics, Zhejiang University,866 Yuhangtang Road, Hangzhou, 310058, China;2. Center for Research in Regional Economic Opening and Development, Zhejiang University, 866 Yuhangtang Road, Hangzhou, 310058, China |
| |
Abstract: | Using data from the China General Social Survey, the China Family Panel Studies, and a unique dataset of enterprises' online recruitment, this research examines the effect of the digital economy on female employment. The empirical results suggest that the digital economy significantly promotes female employment. Consistent with our theoretical analysis, the estimates indicate that this relationship holds because the digital economy promotes the formation of egalitarian gender perspectives, promotes the use of digital technology, and increases labor demand emphasizing the necessity for female-preference occupations. The dividend of the digital economy is tilted toward vulnerable groups in the labor market, including the low-skilled, older, and rural workforce, and only exerts an employment promotion effect on women without parenting burden. Further examination reveals evidence that digitalization has not led to a holistic improvement in the quality of female employment. Digitalization lengthens the working hours of severely underemployed female workers, and improves women's occupational status and job satisfaction; however, it has a minimal impact on protecting employees' rights and interests or reducing overtime workers' work intensity. Nonself-employed, full-time, and part-time workers all benefit from the development of the digital economy, while self-employed workers do not. In addition, a weakening effect of digitalization on the gender employment gap is not evident, which relates to the digital economy generating a female dividend in terms of promoting gender equality and increasing labor demand but resulting in a digital gender divide in the use of digital technology. |
| |
Keywords: | Digital economy Female employment Gender equality perspectives Use of digital technology Labor demand J16 J21 O33 |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|