It starts in childhood, when kids see how males around them struggle, economists say

The male labor force participation rate in the United States has been falling for generations, baffling economists who are struggling to find an explanation.
Accordingly Latest data from the Ministry of LaborFor men aged 20 and over, this rate decreased from 76% in May 2006 to 69.5% in May. This means fewer men are employed or unemployed but actively looking for work.
male participation rate It peaked at 86.4% in 1950, but dropped to 79.7% in 1970 and 76.4% in 1990. In contrast, women’s participation increased steadily until the 1990s, peaking in 2000 and declining only slightly since then.
Numerous theories have been put forward to shed light on more recent declines among men. After the housing bubble burst and triggered the Great Recession, for example, sudden construction job loss It was held partly responsible for men leaving the workforce.
introduction more advanced video games It has even been cited as the reason why men work fewer hours since the early 2000s. Meredith Whitney, one-time “Seer Wall Street predicted the Great Financial Crisis it has been said before Luck Behind the “American male crisis” are young single men living at home and playing video games.
last year, San Francisco Fed took precautions on this issueMen are both withdrawing from the workforce for education or care duties and laid off due to skills mismatch or disability, he said.
Now a new paper University of Connecticut economists Remy Levin and Daniela Vidart have contributed to the debate by arguing that men’s beliefs about the benefits of work are shaped by the labor market conditions they observe throughout their lives, especially during childhood.
Economists have explained that when young men grow up seeing poor wages and high unemployment among the men around them, they form pessimistic expectations about their own prospects later in life, making them less likely to participate in the workforce.
“Our findings suggest that experience effects can transform short-term declines in labor demand into long-term declines in labor supply,” they wrote.
This phenomenon persisted even after men moved to a different situation, and its effects were stronger among men exposed to the experiences of their own racial group.
In addition, the paper noted that childhood exposure explains nearly all labor force participation dynamics, and that men’s expectations for their own wages or employment are based on lifelong experiences, not on macroeconomic conditions such as national unemployment or inflation.
Levin and Vidart conclude: “It is the labor market environment in which men grow up, rather than what they observe as adults, that shapes their later participation.” “This points to the formative years as a critical window for belief formation regarding return to work, with implications for how policy interventions can most effectively improve permanent workforce commitment among men.”

