Title: Home Location Choices and the Gender Commute Gap
Speaker: Ben Zou, Michigan State University
Time: December 4th, 10:00 – 11:30
About the speaker:
Ben Zou is an assistant professor of economics at Michigan State University, where he teaches labor and urban economics. Ben is an empirical microeconomist with research interests in labor economics, urban economics, and economic development. Before joining MSU, Ben received a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Maryland at College Park, and BA and MA from Peking University.
Abstract:
Using administrative records of home mortgages in Beijing, we show that households systematically choose to buy new homes that are closer to the wife’s workplace. Compared with the husband’s commute, new homes are on average 11% closer to the wife’s workplace by distance and require 4% less commute time. In terms of a household’s disutility from choosing a particular home, a one log point increase in the wife’s commute distance is equivalent to a 0.5 log point increase in the house price, and a 1.7 log point increase in the husband’s commute distance. Using a collective household model, we show that home location choices and the resulting gender commute differences reflect the intra-household division of labor and differences in bargaining power. We discuss the implications of the observed gender commute gap for the gender pay gap.