Similar Items: Deadly discrimination: Implications of “Missing Girls” for workplace safety
- Deadly discrimination: Implications of “missing girls” for workplace safety
- The competitive saving motive: Concept, evidence, and implications
- The competitive saving motive: Concept, evidence, and implications
- Too many men, too short lives: The effect of the male-biased sex ratio on mortality
- Mating competition and entrepreneurship
- The competitive saving motive: Evidence from rising sex ratios and savings rates in China
Author: Tan, Zhibo
- The intergenerational legacy of the 1959–1961 Great Chinese Famine on children’s cognitive development
- Does female labor scarcity encourage innovation? Evidence from China's gender imbalance
- Does female labor scarcity encourage innovation? Evidence from China’s gender imbalance
- Sins of the fathers: The intergenerational legacy of the 1959-1961 Great Chinese Famine on children's cognitive development
- Deadly discrimination: Implications of “missing girls” for workplace safety
- Deadly discrimination: Implications of “Missing Girls” for workplace safety
Author: Wei, Shang-Jin
- The competitive saving motive: Concept, evidence, and implications
- The competitive saving motive: Evidence from rising sex ratios and savings rates in China
- The competitive saving motive: Concept, evidence, and implications
- Sex ratios, entrepreneurship, and economic growth in the people's Republic of China
- From "Made in China" to "Innovated in China": Necessity, prospect, and challenges
- Deadly discrimination: Implications of “missing girls” for workplace safety