Intra-metropolitan spatial patterns of female labor force participation and commute times in Tokyo

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2017.11.003Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • We explore intra-metropolitan spatial patterns of female labor force participation.

  • The spatial patterns differ by marital status and the presence of children.

  • Married mothers have unique spatial patterns of female participation.

  • Highly-educated mothers are especially sensitive to commute time.ta

  • Findings shed new light on geographic disparities in female participation.

Abstract

We explore intra-metropolitan spatial patterns of female labor force participation, and examine how they relate to commute times in Tokyo. The spatial patterns differ markedly by marital status and the presence of children. For married mothers, the spatial clusters of low participation and regular employment rates are largely located in the inner suburbs, many of which overlap with the spatial clusters of long male commute times. The spatial regression results indicate that for married mothers, a longer commute time is significantly associated with lower participation and regular employment rates, while for unmarried and childless married women, these associations are mostly nonsignificant. Among married mothers, the magnitude of the negative associations is greater for college graduates than for those with a high school education or less, suggesting that highly educated mothers are especially sensitive to commute times. We argue that the spatial transportation constraint intensifies the household division of labor, resulting in unique patterns for married mothers.

JEL classification

J21
R12
C31

Keywords

Female labor force participation
Commute times
Spatial patterns
Spatial statistics
Tokyo

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