This study uses the unprecedented changes in the sex ratio due to the losses of men during World War II to identify the impacts of the gender imbalance on marriage market and birth outcomes in Japan. Using newly digitized census-based historical statistics, we find evidence that men had a stronger bargaining position in the marriage market and intra-household fertility decisions than women. Under relative male scarcity, while people, especially younger people, were more likely to marry and divorce, widowed women were less likely to remarry than widowed men. We also find that women's bargaining position in the marriage market might not have improved throughout the 1950s. Given the institutional changes in the abortion law after the war, marital fertility and stillbirth rates increased in the areas that suffered relative male scarcity. Our result on out-of-wedlock births indicates that the theoretical prediction of intra-household bargaining is considered to be robust in an economy in which marital fertility is dominant.
翻译:这项研究利用二战期间男性损失导致的性别比率史无前例的变化来查明性别不平衡对日本婚姻市场和出生结果的影响。我们利用基于最新数字化的人口普查历史统计数据,发现有证据表明男性在婚姻市场和家庭内部生育决定中比女性处于较强的谈判地位。在相对男性稀缺的情况下,虽然人们,特别是年轻人更有可能结婚和离婚,但丧偶妇女比丧偶男子更有可能再婚。我们还发现,在1950年代,妇女在婚姻市场上的讨价还价地位可能没有改善。鉴于战后堕胎法的体制变化,在男性相对稀缺的地区,婚姻生育率和死胎率上升。我们关于婚外生育的结果显示,在婚姻生育率占主导地位的经济中,家庭内部谈判的理论预测被认为是稳健的。