Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
We examine whether womens rising labor force participation led to increased intergenerational transmission of occupation from fathers to daughters. We develop a model where fathers invest in human capital that is specific to their own occupations. Our model generates an empirical test where we compare the trends in the probabilities that women work in their fathers versus their father-in-laws occupation. Using data from birth cohorts born between 1909 and 1977, our results indicate that the estimated difference in these trends accounts for at least 1320 percent of the total increase in the probability that a woman enters her fathers occupation.