Print Email Facebook Twitter Females’ Willingness to Work and the Discouragement Effect of a Poor Local Childcare Provision (discussion paper) Title Females’ Willingness to Work and the Discouragement Effect of a Poor Local Childcare Provision (discussion paper) Author Van Ham, M. Büchel, F. Faculty OTB Research Institute for the Built Environment Date 2004-07-01 Abstract We analyze the effects of regional structures on females’ willingness to work as well as on the probability that non-employed women who are willing to work actually will engage in job search. Special permission was granted to link regional data to individual respondents in the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Results of a bivariate probit model correcting for sample selection show that high regional unemployment discourages women from entering the labor market. Further, findings indicate that women with young children are willing to work, but that women with young children and mothers who are unhappy with the regional childcare provision are the least likely to look for a job. These findings indicate that high institutional and spatial barriers discourage mothers from entering employment. Subject female labor supplyjob searchregional labor marketschildcare provisionbivariate probit model To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:6373e5c2-644b-4dca-aae1-bc83af102e29 Publisher Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit/ Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) Source IZA Discussion Paper 1220 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights (c) 2004 The Author(s) Files PDF 157588.pdf 280.97 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:6373e5c2-644b-4dca-aae1-bc83af102e29/datastream/OBJ/view