Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.

We contribute to the understanding of mechanisms underlying deep-rooted gender norms by exploring the link between the historical availability of arable land and contemporary gender outcomes. We argue that an abundance of arable land in historical times, i.e., pre-industrial period, required more wo...

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Main Authors: Chandan Kumar Jha, Sudipta Sarangi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0328083
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author Chandan Kumar Jha
Sudipta Sarangi
author_facet Chandan Kumar Jha
Sudipta Sarangi
author_sort Chandan Kumar Jha
collection DOAJ
description We contribute to the understanding of mechanisms underlying deep-rooted gender norms by exploring the link between the historical availability of arable land and contemporary gender outcomes. We argue that an abundance of arable land in historical times, i.e., pre-industrial period, required more workers in the fields resulting in norms where women worked and contributed from outside the home as well. Consequently, these societies emphasized women's health due to its positive effect on their productivity in the fields. Moreover, this economic contribution provided women greater bargaining power in the allocation of intrahousehold resources. The historical avail- ability of arable land for a nation is measured as the weighted mean of the shares of its constituent ethnic groups' ancestral lands suited to cereal agriculture. Consistent with these arguments, we show that countries with more ancestral arable land have higher female labor force participation rates and better health outcomes, measured by maternal mortality ratio and female-male life expectancy gap. We then illustrate the 'persistence of norm' mechanism, by showing that ancestral arable land measured at the district level is positively associated with individual-level attitudes regarding women's participation in the labor market.
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spelling doaj-art-ec75fca57b69425f8d7f486b1fb9c2ff2025-08-20T03:59:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01208e032808310.1371/journal.pone.0328083Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.Chandan Kumar JhaSudipta SarangiWe contribute to the understanding of mechanisms underlying deep-rooted gender norms by exploring the link between the historical availability of arable land and contemporary gender outcomes. We argue that an abundance of arable land in historical times, i.e., pre-industrial period, required more workers in the fields resulting in norms where women worked and contributed from outside the home as well. Consequently, these societies emphasized women's health due to its positive effect on their productivity in the fields. Moreover, this economic contribution provided women greater bargaining power in the allocation of intrahousehold resources. The historical avail- ability of arable land for a nation is measured as the weighted mean of the shares of its constituent ethnic groups' ancestral lands suited to cereal agriculture. Consistent with these arguments, we show that countries with more ancestral arable land have higher female labor force participation rates and better health outcomes, measured by maternal mortality ratio and female-male life expectancy gap. We then illustrate the 'persistence of norm' mechanism, by showing that ancestral arable land measured at the district level is positively associated with individual-level attitudes regarding women's participation in the labor market.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0328083
spellingShingle Chandan Kumar Jha
Sudipta Sarangi
Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
PLoS ONE
title Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
title_full Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
title_fullStr Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
title_full_unstemmed Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
title_short Historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes.
title_sort historical availability of arable land affects contemporaneous female labor and health outcomes
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0328083
work_keys_str_mv AT chandankumarjha historicalavailabilityofarablelandaffectscontemporaneousfemalelaborandhealthoutcomes
AT sudiptasarangi historicalavailabilityofarablelandaffectscontemporaneousfemalelaborandhealthoutcomes