Time and well-being, an institutional, comparative perspective: is it time to explore the idea of a time policy?
Journal of European Social Policy
2020
30
3
July
275-292
well being ; welfare state ; working time ; comparison
Social protection
https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928719891339
English
Bibliogr.;Statistics
"This article explores the relationship between time and well-being as a social policy question. Although the research on time and well-being is extensive, few have dealt with them together from a comparative institutional perspective. Based on data from the third European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS) of 2012, regarding 34 mostly European countries, in different welfare regimes, we explore two issues: (1) What are the effects of welfare regimes on the uses of time and subjective well-being? and (2) What are the effects of different uses of time on subjective well-being? We find that the institutional structure – the welfare regime – affects the way people use their time. Furthermore, the findings documented that uses of time have a direct effect on well-being when controlling for individual level as well as country-level variables. These findings may have important implications for policymaking."
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