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We study the impact of Chinese import competition in the 2000s on workers and their households in England and Wales. We document both the direct employment changes of individuals affected by trade exposure, as well as the employment response of individuals whose partner is exposed to trade. We find substantial differences by gender. Men respond to import competition by increasing labour force participation at older ages, and by moving into self-employment. This is true both in response to their own trade exposure, and as an ‘added worker effect’ when their partner is exposed to the shock. By contrast, we find no such response for women, who do not increase labour supply following shocks affecting their partners. Gender differences in employment responses reflect differing opportunities in the self-employed sector: male workers exposed to import competition largely enter self-employed jobs in historically male-dominated occupations, as do men reacting to shocks affecting their partners.
Authors
Research Officer
Aitor's research agenda aims to study the changing structure of the labour market and its impact on local places and individuals.
Deputy Research Director
Peter joined in 2009. He has published several papers on the microeconomics of household spending and labour supply decisions over the life-cycle.
Research Fellow University of Surrey
Matthias is a research Fellow of the IFS, a Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Surrey and a Research Fellow at the IZA.
Working Paper details
- DOI
- 10.1920/wp.ifs.2024.5224
- Publisher
- Institute for Fiscal Studies
Suggested citation
A, Irastorza-Fadrique and P, Levell and M, Parey. (2024). Household responses to trade shocks. 24/52. London: Institute for Fiscal Studies. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/household-responses-trade-shocks-1 (accessed: 2 December 2024).
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