HomeNewsOpinionGoldin took women’s careers from economic sideshow to mainstream

Goldin took women’s careers from economic sideshow to mainstream

Thanks to the perseverance of the Nobel-winning Harvard economist, the female half of the population is no longer seen as irrelevant to the macroeconomy

October 11, 2023 / 14:55 IST
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Claudia Goldin
Claudia Goldin has been awarded the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2023.(Source: X/@NobelPrize)

Economics is still a male-dominated profession. Among full professors, only 1 out of every 8 is a woman. Among assistant professors, women are a little less than 1 in 3, similar to their share of undergraduate economics majors. It is a field that has struggled to appeal to women and struggled to retain the women who find it appealing.

When Claudia Goldin, who was just awarded the 2023 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, studied economics in the 1960s, first as an undergraduate at Cornell and later as a PhD student at the University of Chicago, women were even scarcer. The American Economic Association didn’t start formally publishing the number of females in the profession until 1972, when women made up just 7.2 percent of new PhDs and 2.4 percent of full professors.

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It must have taken a lot of grit back then to dig through archives and document facts about “The Work and Wages of Single Women, 1870 to 1920” and “The Economic Status of Women in the Early Republic.”

She not only had to count on men to read these papers and decide to publish them. She had to count on the good opinion of men who had studied work extensively, but rarely given a second thought to how food got on the table, clothes got on backs, or the next generation was nurtured.