Gender, Time Use and Public Policy Over the Life Cycle
38 Pages Posted: 5 Dec 2005
There are 2 versions of this paper
Gender, Time Use and Public Policy Over the Life Cycle
Gender, Time Use, and Public Policy Over the Life Cycle
Date Written: November 2005
Abstract
In this paper we compare gender differences in the allocation of time to market work, domestic work, child care, and leisure over the life cycle. Time use profiles for these activity categories are constructed on survey data for three countries: Australia, the UK and Germany. We discuss the extent to which gender differences and life cycle variation in time use can be explained by public policy, focusing on the tax treatment of the female partner and on access to high quality, affordable child care. Profiles of time use, earnings and taxes are compared over the life cycle defined on age as well as on phases that represent the key transitions in the life cycle of a typical household. Our contention is that, given the decision to have children, life cycle time use and consumption decisions of households are determined by them and by public policy. Before children arrive, the adult members of the household have high labour supplies and plenty of leisure. The presence of pre-school children, in combination with the tax treatment of the second earner's income and the cost of bought-in child care, dramatically change the pattern of time use, leading to large falls in female labour supply. We also highlight the fact that, in the three countries we study, female labour supply exhibits a very high degree of heterogeneity after the arrival of children, and we show that this has important implications for public policy.
Keywords: gender, time allocation, labour supply, household taxation, life cycle
JEL Classification: J16, J22, H31, D91
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Labor Supply and Child Care Choices in a Rationed Child Care Market
-
Labor Supply and Child Care Choices in a Rationed Child Care Market
-
Household Childcare Choices and Women's Work Behavior in Russia
-
By Johannes Geyer and Viktor Steiner
-
By Viktor Steiner and Katharina Wrohlich
-
By Helene Dearing, Helmut Hofer, ...
-
Improving the Modeling of Couples' Labour Supply
By Robert V. Breunig, Deborah A. Cobb-clark, ...
-
Can Child Care Policy Encourage Employment and Fertility? Evidence from a Structural Model
By Peter Haan and Katharina Wrohlich