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Time Use Surveys:

Explore how Time Use Surveys inform policymaking on gender statistics, work-life balance, health, and more. Guidelines focus on harmonisation, policy relevance, and improving comparability and timeliness. Essential for understanding unpaid work, well-being, and gender equality.

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Time Use Surveys:

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  1. Time Use Surveys: Harmonised and Timely Data to Inform Policymaking UNECE Work Session on Gender Statistics Geneva, 12-14 March 2012

  2. Conclusions of the In-depth Review by the Conference of European Statisticians, 2010 • Need to improve comparability, timeliness and efficiency • Usefulness of practical guidelines to improve harmonisation • Policy relevance to be better explained • Establish a task force

  3. Objectives of the Task Force • Guide harmonisation • Collect good practice • Demonstrate policy relevance

  4. Focus of the Guidelines • Minimum set of comparable statistical measures • Timeliness. Light surveys • Time use classifications:Minimum list of activities comparable across any national classification

  5. Policy Relevance • Key reason for conducting TUS • Increased in the light of recent initiatives • TUS inform on a broad range of issues • For certain issues, TUS indispensable

  6. Unpaid Work and Non-market Production • GDP does not capture non-market sectors  potentially misleading policy conclusions • Estimation of opportunity cost • Household Satellite Accounts

  7. Well-being • The Stiglitz commission report • Measurement of social and leisure time • Work-life balance

  8. Social and Leisure Time • What is the influence of government policy? • Unpaid activities to maintain quality of life • Childcare • Repairs around the home • Buying supplies and goods • Correlation of activities with well-being

  9. Work-life Balance • Work hours from labour force surveys • Time use surveys: • When during the day (atypical hours)? • Duration of spells • Synchronisation among partners • Daily and weekly work rhythms • Details of time use at workplace • Work at home

  10. Gender Equality • Unequal distribution of paid and unpaid work • Unsociable working hours • Monitor specific targets: • Fathers’ time with children • Sharing of housework • Women’s time in paid work • Life course variation of time use pattern

  11. Health • Unpaid health care • Health behaviours: exercise, eating, sleeping • Health effects of work and leisure patterns • New mothers’ time use patterns

  12. Other Use of Time Use Data • Transport: commuting patterns • Cultural policy, timing of programmes • Sport-related policy • Policies targeting specific population groups: • Rural areas • Elderly • Children • Youth

  13. Conclusion Time use surveys can inform a broad range of policies Indispensable for the three key areas where other sources insufficient  core rationale for conducting TUS regularly Unpaid work and non-market production Well-being Gender equality

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