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Gender Gap in Numeracy and the Role of Marital Status : Evidence from 19th century France

Perrin, Faustine LU (2020) In Revue d'Economie Politique 130(1). p.51-76
Abstract
Evidence of conventional human capital indicators (e.g. literacy, educational attainment, years of schooling) by marital status is rare or inexistent for the period prior to the 20th century. An indicator of human capital frequently used for the pre-1900 period is the age heaping. We employ this method to chart and analyze the heterogeneity and gender-specific differences of cognitive abilities (numeracy) across France in the mid-19th century by marital status. We find that married women heap significantly less than unmarried women, while single men heap less than married men. We explore the reliability of four hypotheses to explain those differences. We find that married and non-married women’s data are prone to bias and must be used... (More)
Evidence of conventional human capital indicators (e.g. literacy, educational attainment, years of schooling) by marital status is rare or inexistent for the period prior to the 20th century. An indicator of human capital frequently used for the pre-1900 period is the age heaping. We employ this method to chart and analyze the heterogeneity and gender-specific differences of cognitive abilities (numeracy) across France in the mid-19th century by marital status. We find that married women heap significantly less than unmarried women, while single men heap less than married men. We explore the reliability of four hypotheses to explain those differences. We find that married and non-married women’s data are prone to bias and must be used carefully when accounting for basic numeracy skills. Yet, we find a robust correlation between literacy and numeracy. Our findings suggest that married women’s numeracy skills are more closely linked with indicators of human capital, e.g. enrollment rates, than non-married women’s and men’s numeracy skills. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Gender, Age heaping, Human capital, Marital status, Nineteenth century, France
in
Revue d'Economie Politique
volume
130
issue
1
pages
51 - 76
publisher
Editions Dalloz
external identifiers
  • scopus:85086093511
ISSN
2105-2883
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
31e8dc17-3103-4e22-82f4-24243b9a0c2d
date added to LUP
2019-12-12 09:34:13
date last changed
2022-04-18 19:28:13
@article{31e8dc17-3103-4e22-82f4-24243b9a0c2d,
  abstract     = {{Evidence of conventional human capital indicators (e.g. literacy, educational attainment, years of schooling) by marital status is rare or inexistent for the period prior to the 20th century. An indicator of human capital frequently used for the pre-1900 period is the age heaping. We employ this method to chart and analyze the heterogeneity and gender-specific differences of cognitive abilities (numeracy) across France in the mid-19th century by marital status. We find that married women heap significantly less than unmarried women, while single men heap less than married men. We explore the reliability of four hypotheses to explain those differences. We find that married and non-married women’s data are prone to bias and must be used carefully when accounting for basic numeracy skills. Yet, we find a robust correlation between literacy and numeracy. Our findings suggest that married women’s numeracy skills are more closely linked with indicators of human capital, e.g. enrollment rates, than non-married women’s and men’s numeracy skills.}},
  author       = {{Perrin, Faustine}},
  issn         = {{2105-2883}},
  keywords     = {{Gender; Age heaping; Human capital; Marital status; Nineteenth century; France}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{51--76}},
  publisher    = {{Editions Dalloz}},
  series       = {{Revue d'Economie Politique}},
  title        = {{Gender Gap in Numeracy and the Role of Marital Status : Evidence from 19th century France}},
  volume       = {{130}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}