4,191
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
INTRODUCTION

Feminist Perspectives on Care and Macroeconomic Modeling: Introduction to the Special Issue

&

REFERENCES

  • Agénor, Pierre-Richard and Otaviano Canuto. 2015. “Gender Equality and Economic Growth in Brazil: A Long-Run Analysis.” Journal of Macroeconomics 43: 155–72.
  • Antonopoulos, Rania and Kijong Kim. 2011. “Public Job-creation Programs: The Economic Benefits of Investing in Social Care. Case Studies in South and the United States.” Working Paper No. 671. Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY.
  • Benería, Lourdes and Shelley Feldman, eds. 1992. Unequal Burden: Economic Crises, Persistent Poverty, and Women’s Work. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
  • Blecker, Robert A. and Stephanie Seguino. 2002. “Macroeconomic Effects of Reducing Gender Inequality in an Export-Oriented, Semi-Industrialized Economy.” Review of Development Economics 6(1): 103–19.
  • Blecker, Robert A. and Mark Setterfield. 2019. Heterodox Macroeconomics: Models of Demand, Distribution, and Growth. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
  • Braunstein, Elissa. 2000. “Engendering Foreign Direct Investment: Family Structure, Labor Markets and International Capital Mobility.” World Development 28(7): 1157–72.
  • Braunstein, Elissa. 2015. “Economic Growth and Social Reproduction: Gender Inequality as Cause and Consequence.” UN Women Discussion Paper No 5. UN Women.
  • Braunstein, Elissa. 2021. “Care and the Macroeconomy.” In The Routledge Handbook of Feminist Economics, edited by Günseli Berik and Ebru Kongar, 351–9. London: Routledge.
  • Braunstein, Elissa, Rachid Bouhia, and Stephanie Seguino. 2020. “Social Reproduction, Gender Inequality and Economic Growth.” Cambridge Journal of Economics 44(1): 129–56.
  • Braunstein, Elissa and Stephanie Seguino. 2018. “The Impact of Economic Policy and Structural Change on Gender Employment Inequality in Latin America, 1990–2010.” Review of Keynesian Economics 6(3): 307–32.
  • Braunstein, Elissa, Stephanie Seguino, and Levi Altringer. 2021. “Estimating the Role of Social Reproduction in Economic Growth.” International Journal of Political Economy 50(2): 143–64.
  • Braunstein, Elissa, Irene van Staveren, and Daniele Tavani. 2011. “Embedding Care and Unpaid Work in Macroeconomic Modeling: A Structuralist Approach.” Feminist Economics 17(4): 5–31.
  • Cicowiez, Martin and Hans Lofgren. 2021. “Child and Elderly Care in South Korea: Policy Analysis With a Gendered, Care-focused Computable General Equilibrium Model.” CWE-GAM Working Paper Series 21–05. Program on Gender Analysis in Economics (PGAE) American University, Washington, DC.
  • De Henau, Jérôme and Susan Himmelweit. 2021. “A Care-Led Recovery from Covid-19: Investing in High-Quality Care to Stimulate and Rebalance the Economy.” Feminist Economics 27(1–2): 453–69.
  • Elson, Diane. 1991. “Male Bias in Macro-economics: The Case of Structural Adjustment.” In Male Bias in the Development Process, edited by Diane Elson, 164–90. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Elson, Diane. 1995. “Gender Awareness in Modeling Structural Adjustment.” World Development 23(11): 1851–68.
  • Elson, Diane and Nilufer Çagatay. 2000. “The Social Content of Macroeconomic Policies.” World Development 28(7): 1347–64.
  • Ertürk, Korkut and Nilufer Çagatay. 1995. “Macroeconomic Consequences of Cyclical and Secular Changes in Feminization: An Experiment at Gendered Macromodelling.” World Development 23(11): 1969–77.
  • Ferber, Marianne A. and Julie Nelson, eds. 1993. Beyond Economic Man: Feminist Theory and Economics. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
  • Floro, Maria Sagrario. 1995. “Economic Restructuring, Gender and the Allocation of Time.” World Development 23(11): 1913–29.
  • Foley, Duncan K., Thomas R. Michl, and Daniele Tavani. 2019. Growth and Distribution. Second edition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Fontana, Marzia. 2007. “Modeling the Effects of Trade on Women, at Work and at Home: A Comparative Perspective.” In The Feminist Economics of Trade, edited by Irene van Staveren, Diane Elson, Caren Grown, and Nilüfer Çağatay, 117–40. London: Routledge.
  • Fontana, Marzia, Binderiya Byambasuren, and Carment Estradas. 2020. “Options for Modeling the Distributional Impact of Care Policies Using a General Equilibrium (CGE) Framework.” CWE-GAM Working Paper Series 20–03. Program on Gender Analysis in Economics (PGAE) American University, Washington, DC.
  • Fontana, Marzia and Adrian Wood. 2000. “Modeling the Effects of Trade on Women, at Work and at Home.” World Development 28(7): 1173–90.
  • Fukuda-Parr, Sakiko, James Heintz, and Stephanie Seguino. 2013. “Critical Perspectives on Financial and Economic Crises: Heterodox Macroeconomics Meets Feminist Economics.” Feminist Economics 19(3): 4–31.
  • González, Ignacio, Bongsun Seo, and Maria S. Floro. 2022. “Gender Norms and Long-Term Care.” Feminist Economics 28(3): 84–113.
  • Heintz, James and Nancy Folbre. 2022. “Economic Growth, Population Dynamics, and Economic Structure: Long-Run Macroeconomics When Demography Matters.” Feminist Economics 28(3): 145–163.
  • Heintz, James, Silke Staab, and Laura Turquet. 2021. “Don’t Let Another Crisis Go to Waste: The Covid-19 Pandemic and the Imperative for a Paradigm Shift.” Feminist Economics 27(1–2): 470–85.
  • Ilkkaracan, Ipek, Kijong Kim, Thomas Masterson, Emel Memiş, and Ajit Zacharias. 2021. “The Impact of Investing in Social Care on Employment Generation, Time-, Income-Poverty by Gender: A Macro-Micro Policy Simulation for Turkey.” World Development 144(C): 105476.
  • International Monetary Fund. 2022. A Proposed Strategy for Mainstreaming Gender at the IMF. Concept Note. IMF. https://www.imf.org/en/Topics/Gender-Strategy.
  • Jones, Charles I. 1999. “Growth With or Without Scale Effects?” American Economic Review, Papers & Proceedings 89(2): 139–44.
  • King, Elizabeth M., Hannah L. Rudolph, Maria S. Floro, and Jooyeoun Suh. 2021. “Demographic, Health, and Economic Transitions and the Future Care Burden.” World Development 140: 105371.
  • Marglin, Stephen A. and Amit Bhaduri. 1990. “Profit Squeeze and Keynesian Theory.” In The Golden Age of Capitalism, edited by Stephen A. Marglin and Juliet B. Schor, 153–86. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Miller, Ray and Neha Bairoliya. 2022. “Parental Caregivers and Household Power Dynamics.” Feminist Economics 28(3): 114–144.
  • Nelson, Julie A. 1996. Feminism, Objectivity and Economics. London: Routledge.
  • Onaran, Özlem, Cem Oyvat, and Eurydice Fotopoulou. 2022a. “A Macroeconomic Analysis of the Effects of Gender Inequality, Wages, and Public Social Infrastructure: The Case of the UK.” Feminist Economics 28(2): 152–88.
  • Onaran, Özlem, Cem Oyvat, and Eurydice Fotopoulou. 2022b. “Gendering Macroeconomic Analysis and Development Policy: A Theoretical Model.” Feminist Economics 28(3): 23–55.
  • Seguino, Stephanie. 2000a. “Accounting for Gender in Asian Economic Growth.” Feminist Economics 6(3): 27–58.
  • Seguino, Stephanie. 2000b. “The Effects of Structural Change and Economic Liberalization on Gender Wage Differentials in South Korea and Taiwan.” Cambridge Journal of Economics 24(4): 437–59.
  • Seguino, Stephanie. 2010. “Gender, Distribution, and Balance of Payments Constrained Growth in Developing Countries.” Review of Political Economy 22(3): 373–404.
  • Seguino, Stephanie. 2020. “Engendering Macroeconomic Theory and Policy.” Feminist Economics 26(2): 27–61.
  • Seguino, Stephanie. 2021. “Gender and Economic Growth.” In The Routledge Handbook of Feminist Economics, edited by Günseli Berik and Ebru Kongar, 341–50. London: Routledge.
  • Strassmann, Diana. 1994. “Feminist Thought and Economics: Or, What Do the Visigoths Know?” American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings 84(2): 153–8.
  • Taylor, Lance. 1983. Structuralist Macroeconomics: Applicable Models for the Third World. New York: Basic Books.
  • Tejani, Sheba. 2019. “What’s Feminist About Feminist Economics?” Journal of Economic Methodology 26(2): 99–117.
  • Tejani, Sheba and William Milberg. 2016. “Global Defeminization? Industrial Upgrading and Manufacturing Employment in Developing Countries.” Feminist Economics 22(2): 24–54.
  • United Nations. 2015. “Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030.” https://www.undrr.org/publication/sendai-framework-disaster-risk-reduction-2015-2030.
  • Vasudevan, Ramaa and Srinivas Raghavendra. 2022. “Female Self-Employment as a Developmental Strategy: The Dual Constraints of Care-Work and Aggregate Demand.” Feminist Economics 28(3): 56–83.
  • World Bank Group. 2015. World Bank Group Gender Strategy (FY16-23): Gender Equality, Poverty Reduction and Inclusive Growth. Washington, DC: World Bank.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.