Household Work in the UK: An Analysis of the British Household Panel Survey 1994

This paper examines the organisation and performance of household work among dual earner couples of working age. Utilising data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) 1994 the research employs linear modelling techniques in order to model the variables associated with both the time spent on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Work, employment and society employment and society, 2001-06, Vol.15 (2), p.233-250
Hauptverfasser: Bond, Sue, Sales, Jill
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description This paper examines the organisation and performance of household work among dual earner couples of working age. Utilising data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) 1994 the research employs linear modelling techniques in order to model the variables associated with both the time spent on household work and the sharing of household work between men and women living together. In particular, household circumstances and characteristics of partners are considered as independent variables. The findings show that the time men and women spend in paid employment, their partners' time in paid employment, economic power, attitudes, social class and presence of children emerge as variables significantly associated with the two measures of household work performance. The explained variation for time spent on household work is also much higher for women than men. The results show that women continue to carry a ‘dual burden’ of paid and unpaid work which disadvantages them in terms of employment, income and welfare.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0950017001000137
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source SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Couples
Division of labor
Economic power
Employment
Household income
Households
Housekeeping
Housework
Job performance
Men
Modeling
Original Articles
Sexual Division of Labor
United Kingdom
Women
Working Men
Working Women
title Household Work in the UK: An Analysis of the British Household Panel Survey 1994
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