Non-College Occupations, Workplace Routinization, and the Gender Gap in College Enrollment
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Authors
Chuan, A.
Zhang, W.
Publication Date
2021-11-08Series
Cambridge Working Papers in Economics
Publisher
Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge
Type
Working Paper
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Chuan, A., & Zhang, W. (2021). Non-College Occupations, Workplace Routinization, and the Gender Gap in College Enrollment. https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.79368
Abstract
Women used to lag behind men in college enrollment but now exceed them. We argue that changes in non-college job prospects contributed to these trends. We first document that routine-biased technical change disproportionately displaced non-college occupations held by women. We next employ a shift-share instrument for the impact of routinization to show that declining non-college job prospects for women increased female enrollment. Results show that a one percentage point decline in the share of routine task intensive jobs leads to a 0.6 percentage point rise in female college enrollment, while the effect for male enrollment is directionally smaller and insignificant. We next embed this instrumental variation into a dynamic model that links education and occupation choices. The model finds that routinization decreased returns to non-college occupations for women, leading them to shift to cognitive work and increasing their college premium. In contrast, non-college occupations for men were less susceptible to routinization. Altogether, our model estimates that workplace routinization accounted for 63% of the growth in female enrollment and 23% of the change in male enrollment between 1980 to 2000.
Keywords
human capital, college enrollment, gender, occupations, automation
Identifiers
CWPE2177
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.79368
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331919
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