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International Meeting on Gender Statistics within the Framework of the Millennium Development Goals Aguascalientes, 19-

This meeting discusses the Guide to Producing Statistics on Time Use, its importance in gender statistics, and its application in measuring quality of life and valuing women's work.

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International Meeting on Gender Statistics within the Framework of the Millennium Development Goals Aguascalientes, 19-

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  1. International Meeting on Gender Statistics within the Framework of the Millennium Development Goals Aguascalientes, 19-21 September 2006 Guide to Producing Statistics on Time-Use Demographic and Social Statistics Branch United Nations Statistics Division

  2. Time-use survey – Developing new application for an existing methodology • Time-use studies are from the early 1900s, used for reporting on social conditions • Time-use method popularized by the 1972 “Multinational Comparative Time-use Study” involving 12 countries. • In late 1970s the United Nations Statistics Division explored one possible application of time-use methodology - development of welfare oriented measures to supplement the national accounts and balances. • In late 1990s with the call from Beijing for the comprehensive assessment of all forms of work, programme initiated covering several elements.

  3. United Nations Programme on Time-use Statistics (1) • Began in 1997 as a response to Beijing Platform’s call for comprehensive measurement of all forms of work • Developed the conceptual framework for developing a suitable classification for time-use statistics that reflects the needs and specificities of market and non-market work in developing countries • Expert group meeting in November 1997 endorsed the proposed principles and called for a guide on producing time-use statistics

  4. United Nations Programme on Time-use Statistics (2) • Project on the Development of Guide on Producing Statistics on Time-use supported by UNDP and IDRC (Canada) • Created a webpage for time-use statistics • Presenting information about time-use surveys in countries around the world • Presenting basic statistical indicators from national time-use studies • Posting and inviting questions and comments on the draft classification (ICATUS) • The “Guide to Producing Statistics on Time-use” published in 2004, in English; translation into Spanish and other UN official languages in progres

  5. Focus of the presentation • The presentation deals with one of the key outputs of the programme -- “Guide to Producing Statistics on Time-use” • Provides highlights on the content of the Guide, discusses issues that need to be considered in the planning of time-use surveys • Introduces theproposed “International Classification of Activities for Time-use Statistics” currently under review • Identifies follow-up programme activities

  6. What are time-use statistics? • Quantitative summaries of how individuals ‘spend’ or allocate their time over a specified period. • Summaries • Average number of hours (in a day, in a week, in a month, etc.) • Total number of hours (in a day, in a week, in a month, etc.) • Spent on specific categories of activities • traveling (to work, shops); • working (in paid job, unpaid work, domestic work, volunteer work); in recreational activities; educational activities.

  7. Why produce time-use statistics? Originally, • Focus on living conditions, leisure time for working class • Used for organized labour’s advocacy on shortening working day • Assessing effect of technology on homemakers • Providing insights into psychological and social motivations • Analyzing problem of commuting and length of commuting time

  8. Why time-use statistics? (2) • Measurement and analysis of quality of life or general well-being • Measurement and valuation of unpaid work (domestic and volunteer work) • Development of household production accounts • Improving estimates of paid and unpaid work • Analysis of policy implications of development planning issues.

  9. Review of more than 50 country time-use surveys indicate… Two general objectives of time-use surveys: • To provide indicators of the quality of life or well-being of the nation in terms of time-use patterns of people • To improve estimates of the value of goods and services, with particular emphasis on increasing visibility of women’s work through better statistics on their contribution to the economy

  10. Time-use survey … Has a definite application in gender statistics • To map out the division of roles and responsibilities within the household • To obtain a comprehensive measurement of all forms of work • To better characterize and capture difficult-to-measure non-market economic activities (especially those in which women are typically engaged) • To provide the required information on time allocation for valuing women’s and men’s unpaid work

  11. Time-use surveys – Responding to Call from Beijing • Improving data collection on the unremunerated work that is already included in the System of National Accounts (SNA), such as in agriculture and other types of non-market production activities (para. 206 (f) (i)). • Improving measurements that at present underestimate women’s unemployment and underemployment in the labour market (para. 2006 (f) (ii)). • Developing methods quantifying the value of unremunerated work that is outside national accounts, such as caring for dependents, preparing food, for possible reflection in satelite accounts that may be produced separately from but are consistent with core national accounts (para. 2006 (f) (iii)).

  12. Guide on Producing Statistics on Time-use Organized in five parts: • Part 1 – Planning and organizing for producing statistics on time use • Part 2 – Key design specifications for time-use surveys, including specific issues on sample design • Part 3 - Collecting and processing time-use data • Part 4 – Review and dissemination of time-use data • Part 5 – Classification of activities for time-use statistics • Annexes – Examples of questionnaires, codes for contexts, training programme for data collection, suggested tables for time-use data

  13. Specific features of time-use studies (1) Main elements of time-use study • Activities • Selective (predefined set) – time spent is recorded only for selected activity or set of activities within a specified period • Exhaustive – all activities that a person undertakes are listed as they are undertaken (over a period – such as 12 or 24 hours, 7-day week) • Time spent • Time at start and end of the activity • Other issues that define context of the activity

  14. Specific features of time-use studies (2) Context is important • Location – where the activity takes place e.g., at home, at work, at school, at service centre, in recreational facility, etc. • Presence of other people when the activity occurred – “with whom?” • Beneficiary of the activity - “for whom?” • Time at start and end of the activity • Motivation for the activity – i.e., whether activity is paid or unpaid

  15. In summary… • Time-use survey is a tool for studying the scope of activities and time allocation of individuals (girls, boys, women and men) • The main component of the data collection instrument and that which takes the most part of the survey is the information about the nature of the activities and time spent on them • Basic characteristics of the respondents are also collected, as part of the survey, to enhance the analysis and the utility of the statistics compiled.

  16. Time-use survey design components With following key elements I. Survey design Type of survey instrument used for recording activities (time diary or short/abbreviated formats) and related designs Mode of data collection (interview, self-reporting or observation) Type of household survey (independent or component Of a multipurpose survey) II. Sample design and Selection – population and time dimension III. Activity classification dimension

  17. Types of survey instrument Generally two forms • Time diaries – full time diary and “light” simplified time diary - designed to enable respondent to report all activities undertaken over a defined period of time, with the beginning and ending time for each activity • Abbreviated (stylized) versions of diaries – respondents recall amount of time they allocated to certain activities over a specified period (day, week or year)

  18. Mode of data collection • Direct observation – time use is observed and recorded by enumerator • Self-reporting – respondent records time use • Interview – personal/face-to-face or computer-aided telephone interview

  19. Classification of activities for time-use statistics - • Provides detailed comprehensive, systematic listing of activities, that serves as a basis for assessing completeness of coverage of activities • Guides the interviewer for eliciting from respondent the required level of detail • Defines the framework for analysis of the time-use survey data • Serves as a basis for defining analytical and tabulation categories

  20. Why another classification? (1) • Typically activity classifications for time-use surveys focus on detailed lists of non-economic activities such as housework, care-giving, socialization, recreation, learning, mass media • New classifications (developed by some countries) encompass expanded uses of time-use data – and included details for economic activities, and potential for differentiating activities relative to the production boundary of the system of national accounts (SNA)

  21. Why another classification? (2) • Special consideration of gender- specific objectives for TUS • Expanding the objectives of time-use surveys to cover measurement and valuation of unremunerated work necessitates the adoption of an enhanced classification that sufficiently differentiates the various categories of activities… • Hence the proposed International Classification of Activities for Time-Use Statistics (ICATUS)

  22. Principles underlying the proposed activity classification • Flexibility – applied to different analytical objectives as well as other potential uses of time-use statistics • Balanced and comprehensive coverage of groups of all activities, reflecting the structure of time distribution (e.g., productive and personal, formal and informal) • Detailed enough, identifying separately activities of important subpopulations • Close correspondence with classification schemes of historic data sets, and national and regional listings that have undergone cycles of testing, use and review

  23. Purpose and nature of ICATUS • Serve as a standard activity classification for time-use statistics applicable to both developing and developed countries • Builds on existing national and regional classifications • Provide delineation of the boundaries of economic and non-economic activities and productive and non-productive activities • To measure all forms of work including unremunerated work • Consistent with existing standard classifications in labour and economic statistics

  24. Main categories of ICATUS • First level of differentiation – relationship to the production boundary of SNA • Production within SNA boundary – “SNA work” • “SNA work activities” • Personal activities

  25. United Nations Programme on Time-use Statistics (3) – Next Steps • Compile experiences in the use of ICATUS in national time-use surveys • Revise and finalize ICATUS based on comments and other inputs from countries, derived from field application of the classification • Maintain webpage on national practices in time-use statistics • Update, at regular intervals, basic statistics and indicators on time-use • Revise manual(s) on measuring economic activity based on lessons from time-use surveys

  26. To advance this work, and assist other countries…. • Provide information (including documentation) on time-use surveys in countries, for updating UNSD webpage on time-use statistics • Send comments, lessons from the application of, and questions on the classification, to: email address genderstats@UN.org • For further information consult webpage -http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/ sconcerns/tuse/default.aspx

  27. Thank you

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