MARRIED WOMEN'S PARTICIPATION CHOICES AND PRODUCTIVITY DIFFERENTIALS: EVIDENCE
FROM URBAN TURKEY*
Insan Tunali (Koç University)
Cem Baslevent (Department of Economics)
A factor that complicates female labor supply analyses is the variety of ways
in which women engage in productive work. Besides wage labor these include 'home'
work (non-participation), work without pay in a family enterprise, and paid
work on one's own account. We combine the last two (as self-employed) but treat
unemployment as a fourth distinct state, and examine the participation choices
of prime age (20-54) married women whose husbands are employed. We use 1988
household data from urban Turkey and control for regional labor market effects
by including province level variables. Results reveal striking observed and
unobserved differences between the subsamples. We compare the predicted market
wage distributions (after accounting for unobserved heterogeneity) and find
that the wage labor option attracts the best workers in terms of observed productivity
traits. When unobserved productivity traits are priced, it is the self-employed
that have the highest productivity. The unemployed have higher (potential) productivity
than non-participants.