2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2019.102434
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Hard to get: The scarcity of women and the competition for high-income men in urban China

Abstract: Reports of the difficulties of elite women in finding suitable mates have been increasing despite the growing availability and value of men in China. We rationalize this "leftover women" phenomenon within the directed/competitive search framework, which uniquely allows for equilibrium crowding out. Within this framework, we show that the leftover women phenomenon can be the result of women's aversion to men who have a lower income than themselves (hereafter, ALM) and the long-predicted complementarity between … Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
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“…This paper relates to several literatures. First, it adds to the set of studies on the causal determinants of spouse quality, which has thus far focused exclusively on the role of the balance of sexes in the market (Charles & Luoh, 2010;Angrist, 2002;Abramitzky, Delavande, & Vasconcelos, 2011;Ong, Yang, & Zhang, 2020) or individual education (McCrary & Royer, 2011;Geruso & Royer, 2018). I show that labor market opportunities have a significant impact on partner choice and argue that selection out of less desirable marriages is an important channel for this effect.…”
Section: The Review Of Economics and Statistics Figure 1-women's Hourly Wage As A Fraction Of Men's Wage And Marriage Ratesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper relates to several literatures. First, it adds to the set of studies on the causal determinants of spouse quality, which has thus far focused exclusively on the role of the balance of sexes in the market (Charles & Luoh, 2010;Angrist, 2002;Abramitzky, Delavande, & Vasconcelos, 2011;Ong, Yang, & Zhang, 2020) or individual education (McCrary & Royer, 2011;Geruso & Royer, 2018). I show that labor market opportunities have a significant impact on partner choice and argue that selection out of less desirable marriages is an important channel for this effect.…”
Section: The Review Of Economics and Statistics Figure 1-women's Hourly Wage As A Fraction Of Men's Wage And Marriage Ratesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Raters were asked to choose the more physically attractive within each pair. Instead of asking raters for a numerical rating within a certain range of numbers, as is standard in the field (Hamermesh and Biddle 1994), we followed the methodology in Ong, Yang, and Zhang (2020) asked raters to decide only which photo of a pair is better-looking. Such a judgment may be easier and more precise than assigning a number to indicate how good-looking someone is according to a subjective numerical scale (Negahban, Oh, and Shah 2012).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Ong et al (2019) show that there is a "left-over women" phenomenon in Mainland China, despite the increasing number of men in the marriage market in the past several decades due to elite women's inclination to marry richer men. If this holds true for Taiwan, the existence of "left-over women" would further reduce the We define county sex ratios at ages 30 and 35, respectively, as the ratios of men to women who were aged 25-34 and 30-39 and resided in the county in the year when each individual reached ages 30 and 35.…”
Section: Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%