Abstract
PurposeThis paper evaluates the short-term impact of childcare centres' closures, due to COVID-19 restrictions, on Brazilian mothers' labour force participation and employment rates.Design/methodology/approachFormal education is non-mandatory according to Brazilian law until the age of four, allowing the identification of children that attend childcare centres and of those that do not attend. Using data from the Brazilian Household Survey, PNAD Contínua/IBGE, the authors construct a two-period panel with women sampled in the second quarter of 2019 and 2020. The authors apply propensity score matching and differences-in-differences methods to control selection into treatment.FindingsThe results show a negative impact in terms of employment for mothers whose children attended a childcare centre before the COVID-19 pandemic. But there was no impact in terms of labour force participation rates. Investigating heterogeneous effects associated with childcare centres' closures, the authors find that women with fewer years of schooling, with children aged two or three years old and located in urban areas, suffered greater penalties in the labour market due to the closure of childcare centres.Originality/valueFew studies could distinguish the pandemic effects directly associated with childcare centres' closures. The paper is the first to analyse the Brazilian case, undertaking an original approach to handle the problem of selection bias. The results help identify the most vulnerable groups of women in the labour market, shedding light on the importance of childcare centres on women's labour supply and of compensating mechanisms to serve as protection during the crisis.Peer reviewThe peer review history for this article is available at: https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-11-2022-0748.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Economics and Econometrics
Reference34 articles.
1. Inequality in the impact of the coronavirus shock: evidence from real time surveys;Journal of Public Economics,2020
2. Maternity and paternity at work: law and practice across the world;International Labour Organization,2014
3. On the origins of gender roles: women and the plough;The Quarterly Journal of Economics,2013
4. Gendered impacts of COVID-19 in developing countries,2022
5. The impact of the coronavirus pandemic on gender equality;Covid Economics Vetted and Real-Time Papers,2020