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Published Article

Glass Walls: Experimental Evidence on Constraints Faced by Women in Accessing Valuable Skilling Opportunities

Experimental evidence from Pakistan shows that distance poses a large and discontinuous access constraint: women with village-based training centers are four times more likely to access valued training opportunities. More than half of the travel penalty is incurred when crossing the village boundary. Exogenous stipend variation reveals that this boundary effect is costly to offset and is not explained by travel costs. Security considerations are an important factor: providing secure group transport raises take-up, while women with greater safety concerns and those traversing underpopulated areas, a proxy for insecurity, have lower take-up. The training has similar positive benefits for women attending inside- and outside-village centers.

Title Glass Walls: Experimental Evidence on Constraints Faced by Women in Accessing Valuable Skilling Opportunities
Author
  • Ali Cheema
  • Asim I. Khwaja
  • Muhammad Farooq Naseer
  • Jacob Shapiro
Published in Journal of Political Economy, 134, (6)
Publication Date 01/06/2026
Thematic AreaSkill Training
Project Punjab Economic Opportunity Program
See Published Article

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