Nobel lecture (Record no. 149795)

000 -CABECERA
Campo de control de longitud fija 02838nab a2200229 c 4500
003 - IDENTIFICADOR DE NÚMERO DE CONTROL
Campo de control ES-MaIEF
005 - FECHA Y HORA DE LA ÚLTIMA TRANSACCIÓN
Campo de control 20240919145544.0
007 - CAMPO FIJO DE DESCRIPCIÓN FÍSICA - INFORMACIÓN GENERAL
campo de control de longitud fija ta
008 - CAMPO FIJO DE DESCRIPCIÓN FIJA - INFORMACIÓN GENERAL
Campo de control de longitud fija 240913s2024 us |||p| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 ## - FUENTE DE LA CATALOGACIÓN
Centro catalogador de origen ES-MaIEF
Lengua de catalogación eng
Centro transcriptor ES-MaIEF
041 ## - CÓDIGO DE LENGUA
Código de lengua del texto/banda sonora o título independiente eng
100 ## - ENCABEZAMIENTO PRINCIPAL - NOMBRE PERSONAL
9 (RLIN) 18672
Nombre de persona Goldin, Claudia Dale
245 10 - MENCIÓN DE TÍTULO
Título Nobel lecture
Parte restante del título an evolving economic force
Mención de responsabilidad, etc. by Claudia Goldin
260 ## - PUBLICACIÓN, DISTRIBUCIÓN, ETC (PIE DE IMPRENTA)
Fecha de publicación, distribución, etc. 2024
504 ## - NOTA DE BIBLIOGRAFÍA, ETC.
Bibliografía, etc. Bibliografía
520 ## - RESUMEN, ETC.
Nota de sumario, etc. Women are now at the center of the world’s economies. Employment rates for women are at historic highs across the globe. Of the 165 nations in Figure 1, almost 60 percent have female employment rates (for those 25 to 54 years old) that exceed 0.70, and 80 percent exceed 0.50. For comparison, in the United States one-half of the women in that age group worked in 1970 and around three-quarters have done so ever since the early 1990s. Only 20 of the nations in Figure 1 have rates below 0.40, and they are disproportionately in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia. Women are at the center of the world’s economies not just because they are engaged in paid employment to a significant degree. They are rapidly becoming the better-educated gender, constituting the majority of college students in every one of the 38 OECD nations. Women do the vast amount of care-work across the world. And they largely determine the birth rate. But women were not always at the center. They didn’t always control their fates, and they don’t today in some parts of the world. Many of the nations with substantial rates of female employment today once had very low rates. A century ago in the 1920s, less than 10 percent of married women in the United States were reported as being employed outside their homes. In 1900, estimates of “gainful employment”— the conventional measure before the labor force construct was devised—indicate that the figure was only 6 percent, although we will soon see that actual rates were several times that amount. How did the female labor force evolve? And what about the complicated issues of measurement? In particular, what is meant by the notion of “conventionally” measured labor force participation for periods before the modern constructs of the labor force, unemployment, and national income were formalized? This essay summarizes how women historically became an economic force and why, despite being vital to the world’s economies, they still earn less than comparable men even in nations with family-friendly policies and gender-neutral laws, norms, and values.
650 #4 - PUNTO DE ACCESO ADICIONAL DE MATERIA - TÉRMINO DE MATERIA
9 (RLIN) 45401
Término de materia o nombre geográfico como elemento inicial HISTORIA ECONOMICA
650 #4 - PUNTO DE ACCESO ADICIONAL DE MATERIA - TÉRMINO DE MATERIA
9 (RLIN) 42804
Término de materia o nombre geográfico como elemento inicial DISCRIMINACION LABORAL
650 #4 - PUNTO DE ACCESO ADICIONAL DE MATERIA - TÉRMINO DE MATERIA
9 (RLIN) 42804
Término de materia o nombre geográfico como elemento inicial DISCRIMINACION LABORAL
773 0# - ENLACE AL DOCUMENTO FUENTE
Número de ítem anfitrión 172271
Otro identificador del documento OP 234/2024/6
Título The American Economic Review
Número de control del registro relacionado (IEF)103372
Número Internacional Normalizado para Publicaciones Seriadas (ISSN) 0002-8282
Parte(s) relacionada(s) v. 114, n. 6, June 2024, p. 1515-1539
942 ## - ELEMENTOS KOHA
Koha tipo de item Artículos
Holdings
Suprimido Perdido Fuente de clasificación o esquema de ordenación en estanterías Estropeado No se presta Localización (Biblioteca) Sublocalización o Colección (subbiblioteca) Fecha de adquisición Koha signatura completa Designación de pieza (código de barras) Koha Fecha de último uso Precio efectivo desde Koha tipo de item
        Disponible para préstamo IEF IEF 2024-09-13 OP 234/2024/6-1 OP 234/2024/6-1 2024-09-13 2024-09-13 Artículos

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