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The Economic Gap Among Women in Time Spent on Housework in Former West Germany and Sweden
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The quantitative scholarship on domestic labor has documented the existence of a gender gap in its performance in all countries for which data are available. Only recently have researchers begun to analyze economic disparities among women in their time spent doing housework, and their studies have been largely limited to the U.S. We extend this line of inquiry using data from two European countries, the former West Germany and Sweden. We estimate the “economic gap” in women’s housework time, which we define as the difference between the time spent by women at the lowest and highest deciles of their own earnings. We expect this gap to be smaller in Sweden given its celebrated success at reducing both gender and income inequality. Though Swedish women do spend less time on domestic labor, however, and though there is indeed less earnings inequality among them, the economic gap in their housework is only a little smaller than among women in the former West Germany. In both places, a significant negative association between women’s individual earnings and their housework time translates into economic gaps of more than 2.5 hours per week. Moreover, in both countries, women at the highest earnings decile experience a gender gap in housework that is smaller by about 4 hours per week compared to their counterparts at the lowest decile.
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MPRC People
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Liana C. Sayer, Ph.D.
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Liana Sayer Publications
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Kearney examines COVID baby bust
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Diminished births have long-term consequences
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News
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Business Formation: A Tale of Two Recessions
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Working paper by John Haltiwanger, with Ermin Dinlersoz, Timothy Dunne, and Veronika Penciakova
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Research
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Selected Research
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Abraham comments on Work Sharing programs
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Programs help keep people employed during temporary crises
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News
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Workshop - Keith Finlay, US Census Bureau, Labor Economist
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Research Linking Criminal Justice Data with Socioeconomic Survey and Administrative Records at the Census Bureau
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Coming Up
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Katharine Abraham comments on gig workers in The New York Times
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Rapid rise of gig workers not necessarily change the traditional labor market and economy
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News
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Abraham on gig-economy
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Ridesharing services impacting economic growth
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News
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Occupational Differences in Estimates of Time at Work
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John P. Robinson, University of Maryland; Jonathan Gershuny, University of Oxford; 2012-006
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Migration, Assimilation, and Social Welfare
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This chapter reviews the theoretical perspectives used to understand immigrant assimilation, the challenges to studying assimilation and current research on diverse immigrant origins and across diverse locations of settlement. The authors review recent research on the integration and involvement of immigrants and their descendants into several key structural domains: education, labor markets and residential patterns. This review also focuses on variations in these outcomes among immigrants and their descendants in diverse contexts and policy regimes with cross-national comparisons from several immigrant receiving countries. Understanding how immigrants fare and the extent to which their children and grandchildren succeed requires an examination of immigrant characteristics, the migration process and the changes that occur in the context of reception.
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MPRC People
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Julie Park, Ph.D.
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Julie Park Publications
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Haltiwanger research informs Forbes labor market predictions
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Notes strong new business formation
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News