2025/01 | LEM Working Paper Series | ||||||||||||||||
Unpaid Working Time and Disproportionate Female Hazard: an Intersectionality Perspective |
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Caterina Manicardi and Maria Enrica Virgillito |
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Keywords | |||||||||||||||||
Time use, Labour supply, Unpaid work, Gender imbalances
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JEL Classifications | |||||||||||||||||
D13, J22, J16
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Abstract | |||||||||||||||||
How has the distribution of unpaid working time
between men and women evolved over the last twenty
years? Does unpaid working time still
disproportionately affect women, more than fifty
years after the massive entry of the female labour
force into formal employment? And, if so, which
market and non-market factors drive this
stratification and could possibly facilitate the
transition out of an unequal intrahousehold
division of labour? This paper leverages the most
complete dataset collecting individual time
diaries, the ATUS-CPS 2003-2022, to investigate
the role of market variables -such as real wages,
household income, industry and occupation-
vis-a-vis non-market factors -such as gender,
race, household type and state of residence- in
explaining variations in unpaid time
allocation. By exploiting both the cross-sectional
and panel dimensions of the dataset, we provide
novel evidence on individual time allocation and
its gendered distribution, integrating an
intersectional perspective that looks at the role
of income classes and socio-material conditions in
affecting the likelihood of escaping
disproportionate exposure to unpaid work. Our
results indicate that, despite clear class-based
patterns, belonging to the upper income class is
not enough for women to escape disproportionate
burdens.
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