Labour Migration and Households: a Reconsideration of the Effects of the Social Pension on Labour Supply in South Africa
Year:
2004
Linked to organisation:
Cornell University
This paper re-examines the effect of the South African social pension on the labour supply of working-age adults using data from 1993. We take account of the fact that households may include non-resident members, and therefore that the pension may play a role in facilitating migration to work or look for work. We find that rural African women are significantly more likely to be migrant workers when they are members of a household in receipt of a pension, and that it is female pension income that drives this result. We explore a number of possible reasons why pension income might have this effect.
| Attachment | Size |
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| Labour_Migration_and_Householdsposel_fairburn_lund.pdf | 268.98 KB |

















