This paper investigates gender differences in the short- and longer-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on employment status in Argentina. Using individual cross-sectional and panel data from household surveys, we compare employment status (inactive, unemployed, self-employed, or employed, distinguishing between the formal and informal sectors) before, immediately after, and a year after the pandemic. We examine how gender intersects with education and age in affecting employment status transitions and the extent to which COVID-19 deepened gender, educational, and age inequalities. In the short term, the pandemic impacted the labor market position of men and women similarly. Partly because of the labor market policies of Argentina, the pandemic idled both men and women, particularly those in the informal sector but also the self-employed. However, after the pandemic, men regained their pre-pandemic status while women remained (or became) inactive. Within genders, labor market recovery varied with education and age. Young and less educated women were more exposed to the immediate and longer-term negative effects in a manner not observed among men. The pandemic accentuated not only gender inequalities in the labor market but also socioeconomic inequalities among women.
The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Labor Market in Argentina: The Intersection of Gender and Socioeconomic Background
Yasmin A. Mertehikian (corresponding author) is a joint PhD candidate in Sociology and Demography at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA. She specializes in gender, work, social stratification, fertility, and reproductive health. Her dissertation analyzes the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on labor market outcomes in Argentina. Before coming to Penn, she did an MA in Social Sciences at Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento-Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social and a BA in Sociology at Universidad de Buenos Aires, both in Argentina.
Emilio A. Parrado is the Dorothy Swaine Thomas Professor of Sociology and Director of the Population Studies Center at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA. He received a BA in Sociology from the University of Buenos Aires and a PhD in Sociology from the University of Chicago. He has published extensively on issues of social and demographic change in Latin America.
Yasmin A. Mertehikian, Emilio A. Parrado; The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Labor Market in Argentina: The Intersection of Gender and Socioeconomic Background. Sociology of Development 1 June 2024; 10 (2): 138–178. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/sod.2023.0013
Download citation file: