TY - JOUR AU - Fernandez,Raquel TI - Culture as Learning: The Evolution of Female Labor Force Participation over a Century JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 13373 PY - 2007 Y2 - September 2007 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13373 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13373.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Raquel Fernández Department of Economics New York University 19 West 4th Street, 6th Floor New York, NY 10012 Tel: 212/998-8908 Fax: 212/995-4186 E-Mail: raquel.fernandez@nyu.edu AB - Married women's labor force participation has increased dramatically over the last century. Why this has occurred has been the subject of much debate. This paper investigates the role of culture as learning in this change. To do so, it develops a dynamic model of culture in which individuals hold heterogeneous beliefs regarding the relative long-run payoffs for women who work in the market versus the home. These beliefs evolve rationally via an intergenerational learning process. Women are assumed to learn about the long-term payoffs of working by observing (noisy) private and public signals. They then make a work decision. This process generically generates an S-shaped figure for female labor force participation, which is what is found in the data. The S shape results from the dynamics of learning. I calibrate the model to several key statistics and show that it does a good job in replicating the quantitative evolution of female LFP in the US over the last 120 years. The model highlights a new dynamic role for changes in wages via their effect on intergenerational learning. The calibration shows that this role was quantitatively important in several decades. ER -