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Evaluating the pin money hypothesis: the relationship between women's labour market activity, family income and poverty in Britain

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Article

Harkness, Susan ; Machin, Stephen ; Waldfogel, Jane

London School of Economics and Political Science

Journal of Population Economics

1997

10

2

137-158

household expenditure ; income ; labour market ; poverty ; statistics ; women workers

United Kingdom

Welfare State Programme. Discussion Paper

108

Gender equality & Women

English

0969-4463

"In this paper we evaluate the hypothesis that the over-representation of women amongst the low paid is of little importance because women's earnings account for only a small proportion of total family income. Data from the General Household Survey (GHS), together with attitudinal evidence from three cross-sectional data sources, indicate that women's earnings are in fact an important and growing component of family income. The majority of the growth in the share of women's earnings occurs as a result of changing family labour structures; women's earnings are playing an increasingly important role in keeping their families out of poverty."

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