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Children, Youth and Environments Vol. 19 No. 2 (Fall 2009) ISSN: 1546-2250 Market Labor, Household Work and Schooling in South Africa:
Modeling the Effects of Trade on Adults' and Children's Time Allocation
Lulit Mitik Center for Development Consulting
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Bernard Decaluwé Université Laval
Québec, Canada
Citation: Mitik, Lulit and Bernard Decaluwé (2009). "Market Labor, Household Work and Schooling in South Africa:
Modeling the Effects of Trade on Adults' and Children's Time Allocation
." Children, Youth and Environments 19 (2): 83-110. Retrieved [date] from http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/
Read this Article (PDF) | Comment on this Article AbstractThis paper analyzes how economic policies can influence parents’ decisions about
their children’s schooling, household work and leisure in South Africa. Using a
dynamic computable general equilibrium model that integrates both market and
non-market activities, distinguishing male and female workers on the one hand,
and adult and child non-market work and leisure on the other, we find that, in the
context of trade liberalization, gender inequality is likely to rise between adults and
between boys and girls. Furthermore, the paper notes that the increase in adult
male and female market labor supply is made possible through the substitution of
children for parents in household work , although more so in some groups than
others. These effects sustain in the long run. Keywords: household work, market work, schooling, gender, time-use, trade CGE model, South Africa
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