print
References for The gender gap in time allocation
-
Further reading
-
Key references
-
Stiglitz, J. E., Sen, A., Fitoussi, J. P. Mismeasuring Our
Lives: Why GDP Doesn't Add Up. New York: The New Press, 2010. Key reference: [1]
-
Hersch, J., Stratton, L. S. "Housework and
wages" Journal of Human
Resources 37:1 (2002): 217–229. Key reference: [2]
-
Lundberg, S., Pollak, R. A. "Family decision
making" The New Palgrave
Dictionary of Economics. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. Key reference: [3]
-
Fisher, K., Robinson, J. "Daily life in 23
countries" Social Indicators
Research 101 (2011): 295–304. Key reference: [4]
-
Aguiar, M., Hurst, E. "Measuring trends
in leisure: The allocation of time over five decades" The Quarterly
Journal of Economics 122:3 (2007): 969–1006. Key reference: [5]
-
Gimenez-Nadal, J. I., Sevilla, A. "Trends in time
allocation: A cross-country analysis" European Economic
Review 56:6 (2012): 1338–1359. Key reference: [6]
-
Guryan, J., Hurst, E., Kearney, M. "Parental education
and parental time with children" Journal of
Economic Perspectives 22:3 (2008): 23–46. Key reference: [7]
-
Kalenkoski, C. M., Ribar, D. C., Stratton, L. S. "Parental child
care in single-parent, cohabiting, and married-couple families.
Time-diary evidence from the United Kingdom" American Economic
Review 95:2 (2005): 194–198. Key reference: [8]
-
Apps, P., Rees, R. "Gender, time use,
and public policy over the life cycle" Oxford Review of
Economic Policy 21:3 (2005): 439–461. Key reference: [9]
-
Burda, M., Hamermesh, D. S., Weil, P. "Total work and
gender: Facts and possible explanations" Journal of
Population Economics 26:1 (2013): 239–261. Key reference: [10]
-
Campaña, J. C., Gimenez-Nadal, J. I., Molina, J. A. "Gender norms and
the gendered distribution of total work in Latin American
families" Feminist
Economics 24:1 (2018): 35–62. Key reference: [11]
-
Fernández-Crehuet, J. M., Giménez-Nadal, J. I., Reyes-Recio, L. E. "The National
Work-Life Balance Index©: The European case" Social Indicators
Research 128:1 (2016): 341–359. Key reference: [12]
-
Kalenkoski, C. M., Foster, G. The Economics of
Multitasking. New York: Springer, 2016. Key reference: [13]
-
Stiglitz, J. E., Sen, A., Fitoussi, J. P. Mismeasuring Our
Lives: Why GDP Doesn't Add Up. New York: The New Press, 2010.
-
Additional References
- Bargain, O., González, L., Keane, C., Özcan, B. "Female labor supply and divorce: New evidence from Ireland" European Economic Review 56:8 (2012): 1675–1691.
- Bianchi, S. M. "Maternal employment and time with children: Dramatic change or surprising continuity?" Demography 37:4 (2000): 401–414.
- Chiappori, P. A., Salanié, B., Weiss, Y. "Partner choice, investment in children, and the marital college premium" American Economic Review 107:8 (2017): 2109–2167.
- Cavalcanti, T., Tavares, J. "The output cost of gender discrimination: A model-based macroeconomics estimate" The Economic Journal 126:590 (2016): 109–134.
- Hsieh, C. T., Hurst, E., Jones, C. I., Klenow, P. J. "The allocation of talent and U.S. economic growth" Econometrica 87:5 (2019): 1439–1474.
- Lachance-Grzela, M., Bouchard, G. "Why do women do the lion's share of housework? A decade of research" Sex Roles 63 (2010): 767–780.
- Sevilla-Sanz, A., Gimenez-Nadal, J. I., Fernandez, C. "Gender roles and the division of unpaid work in Spanish households" Feminist Economics 16:4 (2010): 137–184.
- EUROSTAT Statistics on Commuting. Luxembourg: EUROSTAT, n.d..