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Historical roots of the dual-earner model: Women’s labour force participation in Sweden, 1870–1960

Molinder, Jakob LU (2022) In Lund Papers in Economic History p.1-46
Abstract
Today, Sweden has one of the highest female labour force participation rates in the developed world, but how deep are the roots of women’s involvement in gainful employment? In this article, I present new estimates of women’s labour force participation rate between 1870 and 1960, the time when the country shifted from a predominantly agrarian economy to an industrial and services-based society. The revised data give a very different pattern from existing series; I find that female participation displays a clear U-shape: falling from the late nineteenth century,reaching a trough in the 1940s, and then starting to rise from the 1960s. Falling employment in agriculture was not balanced out by expanding opportunities in manufacturing, but... (More)
Today, Sweden has one of the highest female labour force participation rates in the developed world, but how deep are the roots of women’s involvement in gainful employment? In this article, I present new estimates of women’s labour force participation rate between 1870 and 1960, the time when the country shifted from a predominantly agrarian economy to an industrial and services-based society. The revised data give a very different pattern from existing series; I find that female participation displays a clear U-shape: falling from the late nineteenth century,reaching a trough in the 1940s, and then starting to rise from the 1960s. Falling employment in agriculture was not balanced out by expanding opportunities in manufacturing, but women’s gainful employment started expanding as the white-collar services sector grew and women’s education increased - following the pattern set out by Goldin’s theory of the U-curve. The male breadwinner period was short and less pronounced in Sweden than in most other countrieshowever. Participation among adult women in the late nineteenth century was above 55 percent, and never fell below 40 percent at the lowest point. My findings lend support to the idea that the dual-earner model of present-day Sweden could be the outcome of a longer historical trajectory. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Working paper/Preprint
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Female labor force participation, Sweden, Dual-earner, Breadwinner, N33, N34, J21
in
Lund Papers in Economic History
issue
2022:244
pages
46 pages
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a1afa215-b860-4b51-af95-dd3a3b56389a
date added to LUP
2022-12-13 16:28:42
date last changed
2022-12-13 16:51:34
@misc{a1afa215-b860-4b51-af95-dd3a3b56389a,
  abstract     = {{Today, Sweden has one of the highest female labour force participation rates in the developed world, but how deep are the roots of women’s involvement in gainful employment? In this article, I present new estimates of women’s labour force participation rate between 1870 and 1960, the time when the country shifted from a predominantly agrarian economy to an industrial and services-based society. The revised data give a very different pattern from existing series; I find that female participation displays a clear U-shape: falling from the late nineteenth century,reaching a trough in the 1940s, and then starting to rise from the 1960s. Falling employment in agriculture was not balanced out by expanding opportunities in manufacturing, but women’s gainful employment started expanding as the white-collar services sector grew and women’s education increased - following the pattern set out by Goldin’s theory of the U-curve. The male breadwinner period was short and less pronounced in Sweden than in most other countrieshowever. Participation among adult women in the late nineteenth century was above 55 percent, and never fell below 40 percent at the lowest point. My findings lend support to the idea that the dual-earner model of present-day Sweden could be the outcome of a longer historical trajectory.}},
  author       = {{Molinder, Jakob}},
  keywords     = {{Female labor force participation; Sweden; Dual-earner; Breadwinner; N33; N34; J21}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Working Paper}},
  number       = {{2022:244}},
  pages        = {{1--46}},
  series       = {{Lund Papers in Economic History}},
  title        = {{Historical roots of the dual-earner model: Women’s labour force participation in Sweden, 1870–1960}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/131214482/LUPEH_244.pdf}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}