Household Preferences for Women’s Employment: A Field Experiment in Bangladesh
Working Paper 34969
DOI 10.3386/w34969
Issue Date
This paper investigates household preferences over who should work and whether these preferences are malleable. We document that men and women prefer that husbands work over wives. To understand why, we randomly assign a six-week job to either the husband or wife and document asymmetry: women’s work improves their own wellbeing but not their husbands’, while men’s work improves both partners’ wellbeing. One year later, we surprise households with a work opportunity. Both women and men in households where women were previously employed are more likely to prefer the woman take the job and express fewer concerns about women’s employment in general.
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Copy CitationYueh-ya Hsu, Reshmaan N. Hussam, Erin M. Kelley, and Gregory Lane, "Household Preferences for Women’s Employment: A Field Experiment in Bangladesh," NBER Working Paper 34969 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34969.Download Citation
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