HomeNewsOpinionClaudia Goldin’s Nobel is a win for women and men

Claudia Goldin’s Nobel is a win for women and men

The first solo female recipient of the economics prize has blazed a trail by identifying the obstacles to gender equality — and how to overcome them

October 10, 2023 / 11:52 IST
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Claudia Goldin
Claudia Goldin. (Source: X)

Women have immense potential to make the entire world more prosperous — yet despite decades of progress, that potential is yet to be fully realised. Harvard Professor Claudia Goldin has spent her career illuminating not only the obstacles that women face but also how to overcome them. For these efforts, she is the richly deserving winner of the 2023 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics.

Goldin is a trailblazer on multiple levels. Of the 93 economic laureates since the prize’s inception in 1969, she’s only the third woman (and the first to be recognised solo, without co-recipients). She was the first tenured female professor in the Harvard economics department. And at a time when leading academics focused on building elegant but often deeply flawed mathematical models of the economy, she stuck to the painstaking work of collecting and analysing empirical data to establish the truth.

After studying the mechanisms of slavery and the cost of the American Civil War, she turned to the topic that would define her career: women and work. By parsing data going as far back as the late 18th Century, she discovered (among other things) that female labour-force participation doesn’t necessarily increase with economic growth, and that education alone won’t eliminate the gender pay gap. Thus, other policies are needed to help women and the economy reach their full potential. Depending on a country’s situation, these might involve women’s expectations, access to contraceptionparenting roles or the flexibility of work arrangements.

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Goldin’s insights have helped guide policymakers’ efforts to promote gender equality — which, if achieved, could add more than 50 percent to the economic output of some countries by expanding the labour force and better allocating human capital, according to one estimate. It could also boost incomes for both women and men. Yet adoption of even plainly beneficial measures, such as child-care subsidies, remains uneven — notably in the US, which last month allowed emergency pandemic-era child-care funding to expire, potentially leaving millions in the lurch.

Aside from her research, Goldin has sought to address a stark disparity in her own field: Women comprise the majority of undergraduate students, but only one in four economics majors. True to form, Goldin’s initiative — which entails, for example, targeted information sessions and mentoring — is structured as a controlled experiment, to establish what actually works. Although the results have so far been mixed, it has boosted women’s enrollment in economics in some colleges and provided others with valuable information on how best to proceed.