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Female participation in African labor markets: The role of information and communication technologies

Gaston Brice Nkoumou Ngoa, Jacques Simon Song

2021Telecommunications Policy93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article investigates the effects of information and communication technologies (ICT) on female labor force participation in a sample of 48 African countries. We specify and estimate linear regression and dynamic panel data models with fixed effects (FE) and system-generalized method of moments (SYS-GMM) estimation over the period 2001–2017. The three main results are that ICT use (mobile phone and internet) significantly stimulates female labor force participation in Africa; this effect is enhanced by financial development and female education; the effect of ICT on female employment in Africa is strongest in the industrial sector. These results remain robust to the provision of social, cultural, and institutional variables.

Topics & Concepts

Mobile phoneInformation and Communications TechnologyGeneralized method of momentsPanel dataSample (material)The InternetEconomicsPhoneInstrumental variableEstimationDemographic economicsBusinessLabour economicsEconometricsPolitical scienceComputer scienceTelecommunicationsLawChromatographyManagementWorld Wide WebLinguisticsChemistryPhilosophyEconomic Growth and DevelopmentICT Impact and PoliciesTaxation and Compliance Studies