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The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes

This study analyzes the effects of China's Universal Two-Child Policy, enacted in 2016, on women's employment outcomes. The implementation of this policy has highlighted the challenges women face in the labor market, revealing a significant disparity between the policy's effects and expectations, as...

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Main Author: Zhao, Sijia
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Zhao, Sijia
author_browse Zhao, Sijia
author_facet Zhao, Sijia
author_sort Zhao, Sijia
collection Thesis
description This study analyzes the effects of China's Universal Two-Child Policy, enacted in 2016, on women's employment outcomes. The implementation of this policy has highlighted the challenges women face in the labor market, revealing a significant disparity between the policy's effects and expectations, as evidenced by the simultaneous occurrence of low fertility intentions and employment difficulties. This research employs a mixed methodology to systematically evaluate the policy's effects on the quality and stability of women's employment while also investigating the underlying mechanisms of this impact. The research indicates that the Universal Two-Child Policy adversely affects women's employment performance in multiple dimensions. Quantitative analyses indicated that second births significantly decreased women's income levels. Qualitative interviews further demonstrated that women's work engagement and efficiency typically declined despite no substantial change in the working hours. Regarding employment satisfaction, only a few women in particular roles and sectors reported increased happiness associated with larger family sizes, whereas most respondents exhibited negative sentiments. Quantitative findings indicate that childbearing behavior diminishes labor force participation, while qualitative research corroborates the occurrence of career interruptions that influence women's career trajectories. An analysis of the underlying causes reveals that the impact mechanism entails a complex interaction among family responsibilities, economic development, and labor market structure. Rising costs linked to alterations in family structure, the efficiency focus of businesses, gender-biased employment practices, conventional cultural norms, and insufficient policy support systems collectively create obstacles to achieving work-family balance for women. This thesis recommends enhancing anti-employment discrimination mechanisms, bolstering the government's regulatory role, refining the public service system, and implementing a gender impact assessment mechanism to facilitate the integrated advancement of fertility policy and employment security.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:55.364Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3498 The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes Zhao, Sijia This study analyzes the effects of China's Universal Two-Child Policy, enacted in 2016, on women's employment outcomes. The implementation of this policy has highlighted the challenges women face in the labor market, revealing a significant disparity between the policy's effects and expectations, as evidenced by the simultaneous occurrence of low fertility intentions and employment difficulties. This research employs a mixed methodology to systematically evaluate the policy's effects on the quality and stability of women's employment while also investigating the underlying mechanisms of this impact. The research indicates that the Universal Two-Child Policy adversely affects women's employment performance in multiple dimensions. Quantitative analyses indicated that second births significantly decreased women's income levels. Qualitative interviews further demonstrated that women's work engagement and efficiency typically declined despite no substantial change in the working hours. Regarding employment satisfaction, only a few women in particular roles and sectors reported increased happiness associated with larger family sizes, whereas most respondents exhibited negative sentiments. Quantitative findings indicate that childbearing behavior diminishes labor force participation, while qualitative research corroborates the occurrence of career interruptions that influence women's career trajectories. An analysis of the underlying causes reveals that the impact mechanism entails a complex interaction among family responsibilities, economic development, and labor market structure. Rising costs linked to alterations in family structure, the efficiency focus of businesses, gender-biased employment practices, conventional cultural norms, and insufficient policy support systems collectively create obstacles to achieving work-family balance for women. This thesis recommends enhancing anti-employment discrimination mechanisms, bolstering the government's regulatory role, refining the public service system, and implementing a gender impact assessment mechanism to facilitate the integrated advancement of fertility policy and employment security. 2025-02-19T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2453 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3498/viewcontent/Sijia_Zhao_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain China Universal Two-Child Policy female employment labor market employment quality mixed research methods Demography, Population, and Ecology Gender and Sexuality Inequality and Stratification
spellingShingle China
Universal Two-Child Policy
female employment
labor market
employment quality
mixed research methods
Demography, Population, and Ecology
Gender and Sexuality
Inequality and Stratification
Zhao, Sijia
The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title_full The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title_fullStr The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title_short The Effect of China’s Universal Two-Child Policy on Female Employment: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Labor Market Outcomes
title_sort effect of china s universal two child policy on female employment a mixed methods analysis of labor market outcomes
topic China
Universal Two-Child Policy
female employment
labor market
employment quality
mixed research methods
Demography, Population, and Ecology
Gender and Sexuality
Inequality and Stratification
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2453
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3498/viewcontent/Sijia_Zhao_thesis.pdf
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