In Pakistan, encouraging women to apply for jobs immediately after graduation significantly improves their likelihood of working by enabling them to enter the labour market before marriage pressures intensify.
Read today's article to learn more:
Posts by Amen Jalal
"The race between the marriage and the labour markets"
Read the latest @voxdev.bsky.social article by Oriana Bandiera, @amenjalal.bsky.social & Nina Roussille
voxdev.org/topic/labour...
Meet @amenjalal.bsky.social , an LSE Economics JM candidate. She won an Outstanding Paper Award at the EEA's Discrimination & Diversity Workshop. Her research interests are in development, environmental & labor economics.
JMP: "Screening Women Out? Pay Transparency in Job Postings" amenjalal.com
π Congratulations to the winners of the EALE Tour 2026!
π Martin Wiegand
π Amen Jalal
π Katarina Kuske
Selected as 3 outstanding young scholars to take part in a postβjob market tour of three leading European institutions in Spring 2026.
Thanks to the World Bank Development Impact blog for featuring my job market paper! Read about it here: blogs.worldbank.org/en/impacteva...
Documenting labor market expectations before graduation, and realized outcomes in the year that follows for university students in Pakistan, from Oriana Bandiera, Amen Jalal, and Nina Roussille https://www.nber.org/papers/w34051
The illusion of time: Gender gaps in job search and employment l Read the latest by Oriana #NBER paper by Oriana Bandiera, @amenjalal.bsky.social & Nina Roussille
www.nber.org/papers/w34051
Thanks to the @econthatmatters.bsky.social team for featuring my job market paper!
The study finds that, instead of discouraging work, Brazil's national cash transfer actually allows mothers to join the labour force, and that this effect can be complemented by local public good provision π