2011
DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2011.582822
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Gender Differences in Time Use over the Life Course in France, Italy, Sweden, and the US

Abstract: This contribution analyzes how men and women in France, Italy, Sweden, and the United States use their time over the life cycle and the extent to which societal and institutional contexts influence the gender division of labor. In order to test the hypothesis that contextual factors play a crucial role in shaping time allocation, this study considers countries that diverge considerably in terms of welfare state regime, employment and paid working time systems, family policies, and social norms. Using national … Show more

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Cited by 237 publications
(243 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Their labor supply choice is particularly constraint because they often do most of the housework and child rearing (Anxo et al 2011).…”
Section: Working Time Preferences Hours Mismatch and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their labor supply choice is particularly constraint because they often do most of the housework and child rearing (Anxo et al 2011).…”
Section: Working Time Preferences Hours Mismatch and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this transformation has hardly been accompanied by new patterns in the gender distribution of housework and care, given the rather limited changes in sharing unpaid work among women and men in most countries (Bianchi et al 2000;Anxo et al 2011). Much of the decrease in the gender gap for unpaid work is due to women investing less time in domestic duties because of their greater involvement in paid work, than due to a substantial increase in men's household-and/or care work contribution (Sayer et al 2004;Craig and Mullan 2011).…”
Section: Changing Gender Rolesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Paid parental leave may be provided by the employer in the private sector; however, only 13 percent of all workers and 6 percent of workers who are at the bottom of the wage distribution have access to paid parental leave (BLS 2016a). Rather than public provisioning of childcare services for children under the age of six, policies through tax deductions for childcare expenses encourage use of market-provided services (Anxo, et al 2011). However, affordable, quality childcare is limited, and enrollment rates of children under the age of six in formal care or early education services is lower in the US compared to the OECD average (OECD 2016).…”
Section: Macroeconomic Conditions Gender and Time Usementioning
confidence: 99%