“…Long theorised and studied in economics (A. Smith, 1776; R. S. Smith, 1979;Rosen, 1986), recent studies have argued for the "pervasive absence" of compensating differentials in labour markets (Bonhomme & Jolivet, 2009), at least for male workers. This study is most closely related to early work on the nexus between public policy and compensating differentials (R. S. Smith, 1979) and recent work highlighting larger willingness to pay for job amenities among women (Felfe, 2012a,b;Flabbi & Moro, 2012;Mas & Pallais, 2017;Jung et al, 2018;Wiswall & Zafar, 2018). In finding that right-to-request policy does not engender a trade-off between wage rates and flexibility for women without young children, this study indirectly supports the idea that those care responsibilities, and the resulting job search constraints, are key for compensating differentials to arise (Felfe, 2012a,b).…”