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Sexual Orientation and Labor Force Participation: Findings from Chile and Uruguay

Sexual Orientation and Labor Force Participation: Findings from Chile and Uruguay This is the first study that examines the association between sexual orientation and labor force participation in Chile and Uruguay. Using information on heads of households and their partners from recent census data, it applies a simple econometric methodology to measure the relationship of sexual orientation and labor participation, juxtaposing individuals who are part of straight and same-sex couples, while determining any difference in this association according to gender. The study finds that partnered gay men are up to 5.0 percentage points less likely to participate in the workforce compared to married straight men. In addition, lesbians are up to 32.7 percentage points more likely to participate in the labor force compared to married straight women. Trends between the two countries are similar, but the likelihood of participating in the labor force differs significantly. Conservatism in the cultural context and legal frameworks of each country arises as a possible explanation. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Feminist Economics Taylor & Francis

Sexual Orientation and Labor Force Participation: Findings from Chile and Uruguay

Feminist Economics , Volume 25 (2): 26 – Apr 3, 2019

Sexual Orientation and Labor Force Participation: Findings from Chile and Uruguay

Feminist Economics , Volume 25 (2): 26 – Apr 3, 2019

Abstract

This is the first study that examines the association between sexual orientation and labor force participation in Chile and Uruguay. Using information on heads of households and their partners from recent census data, it applies a simple econometric methodology to measure the relationship of sexual orientation and labor participation, juxtaposing individuals who are part of straight and same-sex couples, while determining any difference in this association according to gender. The study finds that partnered gay men are up to 5.0 percentage points less likely to participate in the workforce compared to married straight men. In addition, lesbians are up to 32.7 percentage points more likely to participate in the labor force compared to married straight women. Trends between the two countries are similar, but the likelihood of participating in the labor force differs significantly. Conservatism in the cultural context and legal frameworks of each country arises as a possible explanation.

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2019 IAFFE
ISSN
1466-4372
eISSN
1354-5701
DOI
10.1080/13545701.2018.1554905
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This is the first study that examines the association between sexual orientation and labor force participation in Chile and Uruguay. Using information on heads of households and their partners from recent census data, it applies a simple econometric methodology to measure the relationship of sexual orientation and labor participation, juxtaposing individuals who are part of straight and same-sex couples, while determining any difference in this association according to gender. The study finds that partnered gay men are up to 5.0 percentage points less likely to participate in the workforce compared to married straight men. In addition, lesbians are up to 32.7 percentage points more likely to participate in the labor force compared to married straight women. Trends between the two countries are similar, but the likelihood of participating in the labor force differs significantly. Conservatism in the cultural context and legal frameworks of each country arises as a possible explanation.

Journal

Feminist EconomicsTaylor & Francis

Published: Apr 3, 2019

Keywords: Homosexuality; labor force participation; sexual orientation; sexual minorities; conservatism; J15; J16

References