Ticket to ride: Impact of free public transport on women's workforce participation in India
TLDR
Free public transport schemes in India significantly boost women's paid work participation and employment duration, especially in patriarchal areas.
Key contributions
- Free bus schemes significantly increase women's paid work participation and employment duration.
- Impact is concentrated in early adopter states like Punjab and Tamil Nadu.
- Greater effects seen in patriarchal districts with higher mobility restrictions.
- Mechanism: Easing non-financial constraints, lowering barriers to women's mobility.
Why it matters
This paper provides causal evidence that free public transport can effectively increase women's workforce participation in India. It highlights the importance of addressing non-financial barriers to mobility, especially in conservative regions.
Original Abstract
We leverage a quasi natural experiment from India on introduction of free bus schemes for women across five states to study it's impact on women's workforce participation. We use two rounds of the representative Time Use Survey and a triple difference estimation strategy, complemented by an event study framework to identify the causal relationship of interest. Findings reveal that the bus scheme was successful in improving women's paid work participation and duration of employment. We confirm that these results are not merely a continuation of prior trends. The scheme's effects are concentrated among early adopters like Punjab and Tamil Nadu, two states with historically different levels of women's workforce participation. We also find disproportionately higher effects for women residing in more patriarchal districts with higher mobility restrictions. We argue that the scheme works through easing of non-financial binding constraints, which lowers the barriers to women's mobility and workforce participation.
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