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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Corpeleijn, A.W.F.1
Note: [1] A.W.F. Corpeleijn has been working at the Netherlands Central Bureau of Statistics since 1972. He was in charge of the analysis and publication of the Labour Force Sample Survey for a long period. Now he is doing research into the transition from school to work and other subjects.
Abstract: In the Netherlands, the previous pattern of most women withdrawing from the labour force after marriage has changed: it is now quite usual for women to work until they have their first child. One statistical consequence of this change is a remarkable increase in the labor force participation rate of young married women. However, it is quite possible that the length of the women's first stay on the labour market at the end of the seventies was about the same as twenty years before. Relatively few women leave the labour force in the first five years after school; after that, however, a mass exodus starts. The Labour Force Sample Survey supplies data which can describe this process. Statistics on flows and durations give a clearer picture of labour force participation than the current participation rates.
DOI: 10.3233/SJU-1985-3403
Journal: Statistical Journal of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, vol. 3, no. 4, pp. 353-362, 1985
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