Publication:
Are Men Benefiting from the New Economy : Male Economic Marginalization in Argentina, Brazil, and Costa Rica

dc.contributor.author Arias, Omar
dc.date.accessioned 2014-08-15T20:00:35Z
dc.date.available 2014-08-15T20:00:35Z
dc.date.issued 2001-12
dc.description.abstract The economies of Latin America have undergone extensive reforms, raising concerns about how these changes have affected the labor market. But there is also increasing concern that the reforms may have deeper social ramifications as the new economies strain the ability of certain groups of men to work and to earn good wages, fulfilling their traditional role as providers. Using household surveys broadly covering the period 1988-97 in urban areas of Argentina, Brazil, and Costa Rica, Arias examines the patterns of unemployment and real wage growth for distinct groups of male workers to see whether there is evidence of a deterioration in men's ability to be economically self-sufficient. He finds no general trend of male economic marginalization. The incidence and duration of unemployment have increased the most for the typically vulnerable group-young, less educated, informal sector workers-but the increased duration of unemployment has also affected older and more educated men. With respect to wages, density and quantile regression analysis indicates that the usual stories of wage marginalization of vulnerable workers can hardly explain the observed variety of wage growth patterns in the three countries. The positive wage performance has been concentrated mainly in the higher quantiles of the conditional wage distribution. This suggests that differences in unobservable worker characteristics, such as industriousness, labor market connections, and quality of schooling, have been key determinants of the ability of male workers in the region to adapt to economic restructuring. These results suggest that assistance should be targeted to some groups so that frustrations in asserting an economic identity do not lead to aggressive behavior. But they also show that we must look elsewhere for the roots of the increase in socially dysfunctional behavior. en
dc.identifier http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/12/1660277/men-benefiting-new-economy-male-economic-marginalization-argentina-brazil-costa-rica
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19404
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2740
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject MALES
dc.subject MARGINALIZATION
dc.subject ECONOMIC REFORM
dc.subject HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
dc.subject UNEMPLOYMENT STATISTICS
dc.subject MALE EMPLOYEES
dc.subject WAGE INCREASES
dc.subject ECONOMIC SELF SUFFICIENCY
dc.subject OLDER WORKERS
dc.subject EDUCATIONAL LEVEL
dc.subject VULNERABLE GROUPS
dc.subject SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AGED
dc.subject AGING
dc.subject ALCOHOLISM
dc.subject BARRIERS TO ENTRY
dc.subject CAPITAL GOODS
dc.subject COMPETITIVENESS
dc.subject CRIME
dc.subject DEBT
dc.subject DEFICITS
dc.subject DEREGULATION
dc.subject DEVALUATION
dc.subject ECONOMIC GROWTH
dc.subject ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
dc.subject ECONOMIC STRUCTURE
dc.subject ECONOMIC THEORY
dc.subject EXCHANGE RATE
dc.subject EXPORTS
dc.subject FAMILIES
dc.subject FINANCIAL RESTRUCTURING
dc.subject FISCAL REFORM
dc.subject FUTURE RESEARCH
dc.subject GDP
dc.subject GROWTH RATE
dc.subject HUMAN CAPITAL
dc.subject INCOME
dc.subject INDEXATION
dc.subject INFLATION
dc.subject INFLATION RATE
dc.subject INSURANCE
dc.subject INTEREST RATES
dc.subject LABOR COSTS
dc.subject LABOR FORCE
dc.subject LABOR MARKETS
dc.subject LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
dc.subject LARGE PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
dc.subject LAWS
dc.subject LDCS
dc.subject LIVING STANDARDS
dc.subject MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
dc.subject METROPOLITAN AREAS
dc.subject MONETARY POLICY
dc.subject PENSIONS
dc.subject PRICE INCREASES
dc.subject PRIVATE BANKS
dc.subject PRIVATIZATION
dc.subject PRODUCTIVITY
dc.subject PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
dc.subject PUBLIC SECTOR
dc.subject REAL GDP
dc.subject REAL WAGES
dc.subject REDUNDANCY
dc.subject REGRESSION ANALYSIS
dc.subject REORGANIZATION
dc.subject RETIREMENT
dc.subject SAFETY
dc.subject SAFETY NETS
dc.subject SOCIAL SERVICES
dc.subject STATE BANKS
dc.subject STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT
dc.subject SUBSIDIARY
dc.subject TAX COLLECTION
dc.subject TAX RATES
dc.subject TAXATION
dc.subject TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
dc.subject TRADE LIBERALIZATION
dc.subject UNEMPLOYMENT
dc.subject UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
dc.subject VIOLENCE
dc.subject WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
dc.subject WAGES
dc.subject WORKERS
dc.subject YOUNG WORKERS
dc.title Are Men Benefiting from the New Economy : Male Economic Marginalization in Argentina, Brazil, and Costa Rica en
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.crosscuttingsolutionarea Jobs
okr.date.disclosure 2001-12-30
okr.doctype Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
okr.doctype Publications & Research
okr.docurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/12/1660277/men-benefiting-new-economy-male-economic-marginalization-argentina-brazil-costa-rica
okr.globalpractice Social Protection and Labor
okr.globalpractice Governance
okr.globalpractice Health, Nutrition, and Population
okr.identifier.doi 10.1596/1813-9450-2740
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum 000094946_02010904095777
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum 1660277
okr.identifier.report WPS2740
okr.language.supported en
okr.pdfurl http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2002/01/18/000094946_02010904095777/Rendered/PDF/multi0page.pdf en
okr.region.administrative Latin America & Caribbean
okr.region.country ARGENTINA
okr.region.country Brazil
okr.region.country Costa Rica
okr.theme Social protection and risk management :: Other social protection and risk management
okr.topic Health Monitoring and Evaluation
okr.topic Economic Theory and Research
okr.topic Banks and Banking Reform
okr.topic Environmental Economics and Policies
okr.topic Social Protections and Labor :: Labor Policies
okr.topic Governance :: Youth and Governance
okr.topic Health, Nutrition and Population :: Public Health Promotion
okr.unit Gender Sector Unit, Latin America and the Caribbean Region
okr.volume 1
relation.isSeriesOfPublication 26e071dc-b0bf-409c-b982-df2970295c87
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