1 / 1

Married Parents’ Time Use at Home, at Play, and with Children: Variations by Labor Force Status

Married Parents’ Time Use at Home, at Play, and with Children: Variations by Labor Force Status Ariel Kalil, Ph.D. and Kathleen M. Ziol-Guest, Ph.D. Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago. Study Aims. Methods. Time in Female-Typed Tasks. Time with Children.

aloha
Download Presentation

Married Parents’ Time Use at Home, at Play, and with Children: Variations by Labor Force Status

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Married Parents’ Time Use at Home, at Play, and with Children: Variations by Labor Force Status Ariel Kalil, Ph.D. and Kathleen M. Ziol-Guest, Ph.D. Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago Study Aims Methods Time in Female-Typed Tasks Time with Children Examine the associations between labor force status and time in household activities, leisure, and care of household children for married mothers and married fathers. • Dependent Variables • Time spent: Minutes per day • Sleep • Female-Typed Tasks: Cooking & cleaning • Male-Typed Tasks: Repair & maintenance • Leisure: Socializing, relaxing, sports, & recreation • Children: Care, play, education, & health • Independent Variables • Respondent characteristics including own labor force status, age, race, and education • Spouse employment status • Household characteristics including income, number of minor children, and age of youngest child • Time study characteristics including weekend, holiday, and survey year indicators • Statistical Model • Tobit Regression (Accounts for censoring at zero) • Descriptive Statistics: Spouse Employment • 65% of fathers who work are married to women who work • 90% of mothers who work are married to men who work * * * * * * * * * Background * Note: * indicates different from mother full time at p < .05 Note: * indicates different from mother full time at p < .05 • Why do women and men spend differing amounts of time on household activities or caring for children? • Hypotheses • Gender-role ideology: Men and women are socialized to perform sex-typed tasks • Time availability: Spouse with the most available time will perform greatest number of tasks • Bargaining: Greater the individual’s economic resources, more leverage in opting out of tasks • Specialization: The spouse with lower earnings will specialize in home production to promote household efficiency Additional Comparisons Time in Male-Typed Tasks • Sleep: Employed fathers spend less time sleeping than all mothers. Unemployed fathers spend marginally more time sleeping than mothers who work full-time. • Average number of father (mother) minutes is 486 (501) • Female-Typed Tasks: Fathers spend less time than mothers in female-typed tasks regardless of labor force status. • Average number of father (mother) minutes is 31 (138) • Male-Typed Tasks: Fathers spend more time than mothers in male-typed tasks, regardless of labor force status. • Average number of father (mother) minutes is 39 (15) • Leisure: Fathers spend more time than mothers in leisure, regardless of labor force status. • Average number of father (mother) minutes is 235 (211) • Children: Fathers spend less time than mothers with children (except full-time employed mothers), regardless of labor force status. • Average number of father (mother) minutes is 50 (105) * * * * Data and Sample Note: * indicates different from mother full time at p < .05 American Time Use Survey 2003 and 2004 Married respondents who are not retired or disabled with children in the household 10,194 parents (60% from 2003 Survey) Includes 4,805 Fathers and 5,389 Mothers Time in Sleep Time in Leisure * * * * * * * * * Father Employment Status 92% Employed 3% Unemployed 4% OLF Mother Employment Status 43% Full time 24% Part time 4% Unemployed 30% OLF * * Note: * indicates different from mother full time at p < .05 Note: * indicates different from mother full time at p < .05

More Related