It has been argued that greater spatial constraints are imposed on the job searches of women workers and that these greater constraints account for some of the gender wage gap. All researchers agree that women commute shorter distances to work than men. In addition, some researchers have argued from indirect evidence that two-earner households give greater weight to husbands' job opportunities when choosing a residential location. In this paper, we use data on two-earner households from the 1980 Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS) of the US Census for the Detroit and Philadelphia SMSAs to quantify the effects of residential location and of gender differences in commuting behaviour on the gender gap in wages. First, we find that within white households wives encounter relatively greater spatial variation in wages than their husbands but that there is less of a gender difference among black households. Second, we analyse the simultaneous effects of commuting and residential constraints on wages. We find for both cities, and for both blacks and whites, that the gender wage gap is not changed in any significant way by altering women's intrametropolitan residential and job locations.
The economic ties between Taiwan and the mainland China had been restored since 1987. A comparison of Taiwan's investment toward the mainland and the ASEANs shows that the investment size is much smaller in the mainland in terms of money flow; nonetheless, much higher in terms of number of firms. Also, the effects of investment‐induced trade is much stronger in the mainland. Using the 1986 Input‐Output Tables and the data set of officially registered investment volume by industry, this paper simulates the possible linkage effects on output, employment and export shift for both sides.
This paper examines the transformation of the textile and garment industry in Taiwan from the period after 1945, when the industry was small and inconsequential, to the contemporary period, where the industry is a world leader at the frontier of fibre and new material development. The drivers of these developments include the role of industrial policy, initial assistance from the USA, generous export-orientated, investment-friendly incentives, and regulatory pressures imposed in global markets. Taiwan successfully restructured and reached the innovation-driven phase of the industry by the late 1980s, relocating labour-intensive activities to China and Southeast Asia, with Taiwan specialising in technology-intensive activities. Although the industry's employment and exports have fallen since the 1980s, the successful evolution of firms into high value-added and upstream activities continues to maintain the industry's dynamism in Taiwan.
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