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Time Use Across the Life Course Conference
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Coming Up
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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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Sayer research featured in The Atlantic
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Varies by person's role
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News
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Time Use Data for Health and Well Being 2023
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Sponsored by MPRC, NICHD, Minnesota Population Center, and the Maryland Time Use Laboratory
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Research
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Sponsored Events
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Who Experiences Leisure Deficits? Mothers' Marital Status and Leisure Time
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The authors used the 2003 to 2012 American Time Use Survey to examine marital status variation in mothers' leisure time. They found that never‐married mothers have more total leisure but less high‐quality leisure when compared with married mothers. Never‐married mothers' leisure is concentrated in passive and socially isolated activities that offer fewer social and health benefits. Black single mothers have the highest amount of socially isolated leisure, particularly watching television alone. Results suggest that differences in the context and type of leisure are salient dimensions of the divergent and stratified life conditions of married, divorced, and single mothers.
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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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Liana Sayer Named Next Editor of Journal of Marriage and Family
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Tenure will begin with the February 2021 issue
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News
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Time Use Workshop with Liana Sayer and Kelsey Drotning
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Using Time Use Data to Investigate Trends & Determinants of Social Isolation
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Coming Up
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Time Use Across the Life Course: Family Inequality and Multigenerational Well-Being
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Intersection of time use, family inequality, and well-being
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Research
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Selected Research
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Intergenerational time connections among grandparents, mid-life children, and grandchildren in global perspective
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Liana Sayer explores cross-national patterns of intergenerational socio-economic participation and well-being in contemporary families
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Seed Grant Program
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Seed Grants Awarded
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Time Use Data for Health and Well Being 2021
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Sponsored by MPRC, NICHD, and the Maryland Time Use Laboratory
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Research
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Sponsored Events