Cooking, caring and volunteering: unpaid work around the world
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris
OECD Publishing - Paris
2011
39 p.
household production ; statistics ; unpaid work ; volunteer
China ; India ; OECD countries ; South Africa
OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers
116
Employment
English
Bibliogr.
"Household production constitutes an important aspect of economic activity and ignoring it may lead to incorrect inferences about levels and changes in well-being. This paper sheds light on the importance of unpaid work by making use of detailed time-use surveys for 25 OECD member countries and 3 emerging economies. The calculations suggest that between one-third and half of all valuable economic activity in the countries under consideration is not accounted for in the traditional measures of well-being, such as GDP per capita. In all countries, women do more of such work than men, although to some degree balanced – by an amount varying across countries – by the fact that they do less market work. While unpaid work – and especially the gender division of unpaid work – is to some extent related to a country's development level, country cross-sectional data suggest that demographic factors and public policies tend to exercise a much larger impact. The regular collection of time-use data can thus be of tremendous value for government agencies to monitor and design public policies, and give a more balanced view of well-being across different societies."
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