posted on 2024-09-05, 22:20authored byPradeep Kumar Panda
This paper explores one of the key issues in current research on
gender and development: the links between poverty and young women’s
employment. Specifically, the following questions were addressed, in
the context of Kerala: Which young women work for pay and why? To
what extent is a woman’s household economic status -- especially poverty
status -- an important determinant of employment, and to what degree
does this relationship differ for married and single women? Data for this
study come from a 1997 survey of 530 women aged 18 to 35 in
Trivandrum district of Kerala. The analysis provides strong evidence
for a U-shaped relationship between household economic status (or class
status) and women’s current employment status. This is true for the entire
sample and for the married women. However, in case of single women,
poverty increases the likelihood of paid employment without significant
effect at the upper end of the class spectrum. The interplay of economic
factors (in terms of household needs and aspirations) and cultural factors
(in terms of women’s position in the family as unmarried daughters as
opposed to wives or daughters-in-law) as determinants of women’s
employment is important both on the supply side of the labour market
and women’s ability to obtain employment in an imperfect and almost
saturated labour market in the context of Kerala.
JEL Classification: I32, J12, J16, J23
Key Words: women, employment, poverty, households, Kerala
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Panda, Pradeep Kumar (1999) Poverty and young women's employment : linkages in Kerala. CDS working papers, no.292. Trivandrum: CDS.