1st Edition

Gender, Growth and Trade The Miracle Economies of the Post-war Years

By David Kucera Copyright 2001

    Gender, Growth and Trade examines the role of women as a flexible, contingent workforce in Germany and Japan. This unique comparative study of two of the world's foremost industrialized economies situates empirical results in the context of broader cultural concerns, considering issues such as market flexibility, unemployment, union policy and labour market institutions.

    1. Unemployment, Labor Market Flexibility and Women as a Buffer Workforce Introduction: defining labor market flexibility Part 1. Evidence on the relationship between labor market flexibility and unemployment Part 2. Unemployment and labour flexibility in Japan Conclusion 2. Women's Integration into the Workforce Introduction: the buffer, job segregation, and substitution hypotheses Foreign workers in Germany as a buffer workforce Women as a buffer workforce and the job segregation hypothesis in sectors and manufacturing industries Comparing patterns of gender segregation Conclusion 3. Industrial Relations and Labor Market Institutions Introduction: combining high and low road strategies in Japan Lifetime employment and nenko earnings in Japan: persisting institutions Temporary employment as a stepping stone and buffer Part-time employment from demand and supply sides Women and unions Conclusion Appendix: Policies supporting the employment of mothers; Maternity leave policies; Child care provisions 4. Foreign Trade, Employment and Earnings Introduction: skills bias and gender bias Part 1. Foreign trade and men and women's employment Part 2. Foreign trade and diverging gender wage gaps in Germany and Japan Conclusion 5. German Reunification Introduction: the question of convergence Women's employment in East Germany and persisting inequalities After the wall: women's high unemployment and demographic shocks Conclusion

    Biography

    Kucera, David

    'The book provides useful insights into the determinants of women's labour force participation - a crucial issue in the current debate on sustaining the welfare state in the context of declining fertility and population ageing, and the resulting shrinkage of the economically active population.' - International Labour Review