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Labour Market Consequences of Motherhood in France and Germany - Exploring Mechanisms with linked Employer-Employee data

Subject Area Empirical Social Research
Term since 2020
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 449446868
 
The motherhood penalty on wages and employment is a major source of gender inequality in the labour market, whose reduction is a stated aim of the European Parliament and the Council on the implementation of the principle of equal opportunities and equal treatment for men and women. We propose studying its causes, using large administrative data for France and Germany that allow us to link employers to employees and look at micro mechanisms in a comparative setup. Specifically, we aim to jointly study the role of firms, human capital depreciation and gender norms in shaping the labour market effects of children in different institutional and policy contexts. Our research project has two main objectives: (1) Synchronizing and harmonizing of high quality administrative data that exist in relatively similar forms in Germany and France and preparing replication tools for the scientific community. (2) Using the resulting database to compare both countries with regard to family-related employment interruptions and subsequent maternal career and income developments. As there are almost no registry datasets prepared for comparative cross-national research, the resulting data will be of high value to the research community. Comparatively analysing the drivers of the motherhood wage penalty in France and Germany illustrates the potential of this data and meaningfully contributes to the literature on gender inequality in the labour market. Registry data allows us to be the first to look at how mothers sort into firms in different countries and to thus directly compare if labour market specific mechanisms through which childbirth affects economic gender inequalities differ according to national context. France and Germany represent a compelling case study, as both countries followed different paths in how fast they integrated women into the labour force, in implementing family policies and in supporting of dual earner couples. France provides extensive all day childcare services enabling women a fast re-entry into the labour market and has a considerably lower motherhood wage and employment penalty than Germany. To understand the mechanisms creating the motherhood penalty we use linked employeremployee to estimate exact employment and wage penalties for children on a year by year basis after childbirth. We aim to look at the extent to which wage and employment reductions are the result of mothers sorting into more low-wage, part-time oriented and gendersegregated firms. We expect that firm effects and maternity induced gender-workplace segregation, matter more in producing a high motherhood penalty in Germany, where a long detachment from the labour market and part-time work are more common. Finally, we aim to look at how local differences in gender norms affect the wage penalty, expecting to find a greater influence on careers in Germany, which has an institutional setting in which returning to full time work after birth is less of a societal norm.
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection France
Cooperation Partner Professor Dr. Sander Wagner
 
 

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