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Gendered divisions of labour and the intergenerational transmission of inequality Jonathan Gershuny Centre for Time Use Research Department of Sociology.

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Presentation on theme: "Gendered divisions of labour and the intergenerational transmission of inequality Jonathan Gershuny Centre for Time Use Research Department of Sociology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Gendered divisions of labour and the intergenerational transmission of inequality Jonathan Gershuny Centre for Time Use Research Department of Sociology University of Oxford For GENET Conference, December 2009

2 This Talk Proposition: –National systems of regulation of access to work have effects on life chances which differ markedly by gender and class-of origin. Based on two unpublished papers: –Man-Yee Kan, Oriel Sullivan, JG; Gender Convergence in Domestic Work (2009) –JG; Dynamics of Social Position (2008) Kan, Sullivan and Gershuny are in the Sociology Department and Centre for Time Use Research, University of Oxford.

3 Definitions Portable or Embodied (vs Fixed) capitals: human (Becker, Mincer) or (1) economic, (2) social, (3) cultural (Bourdieu) Embodied capitals formed: 1.In household of origin… 2.…then through the formal educational system… 3.…and recursively through practices of daily life. time-use gives empirical estimates of practices Embodied capital dynamics life chances Good/bad outcomes result from current capitals Capitals indicate advantages and outcomes Hence, new approach to intergenerational social mobility.

4 The day and the lifecourse Theoretical intuition: Daily choices among paid work, unpaid work, leisure/consumption capitals form at differential rates differentiate individual life-chances consequences for transmission of position to children

5 Two steps (two data sources) STEP 1 (Multinational Time Use Study) –Typologies of national systems of work regulation and gender ideologies… –…are strongly associated with different historical changes in work patterns STEP 2 (British Household Panel Study) –Lifecourse changes in gender work-sharing… –…polarise class mobility and life-chances

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7 The Multinational Time Use Study @ December 2009

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9 Welfare Regimes and Gender Ideologies liberal market regimes: –UK, the USA, Canada and Australia –modified breadwinner gender ideology, women both paid work & caring roles social democratic nordic regimes: –Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden –dual earner family model, high employment rate of both women and men conservative/corporatist regimes: –Netherlands, France, Germany, Austria –weak familist gender ideology, men primary breadwinners, women carers southern regime: (later addition to typology) –Spain, Italy and Israel –traditional familist gender ideology, stronger emphasis on womens family role

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11 Step 1. Public regulation matters Note: –corporatist, liberal and nordic groups all start out rather similar in the 1960s –Gender equality in total work (isowork) Implications: 1.Public policy has a real effect on gendered balance between paid and unpaid work 2.Gender differentials in rates of accumulation of economic capital affected by regime choices.

12 Human capital: the Essex Score Data from British Household Panel Study –5000 UK households, 1991present Variables in the model: Age, age squared, Education dummies MOW scores (mean occupational wage, 2 digit categories, standardised to 0-100) Work, family care months over past 4 years Dummies for top MOW decile and deciles 7 to 9 Product of MOW dummies and age, age squared Sex only in selection equation Kan and Gershuny ISER WP 2006-03

13 BHPS longitudinal evidence

14 Contrasting leavers and stayers Consider all women in employment at time of BHPS interview before first birth: –leaverswomen not in employment the year after first birth. –stayerswomen in employment at all of six subsequent annual interviews. –Note third intermediate category: non-leavers with various other post-birth strategies. (details of regression modelling available on request)

15 Alternative household work strategies

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21 Step 2. Gender balance matters UK as example of liberal regime lacking strong childcare & paternity leave regulations: For women with parents in top quintile: –Income (humcap) penalties falling from the 1930s to 1950s birth cohorts, to around 20%. For women with parents in bottom quintile: –penalties rising from 1920s to 1950s birth cohorts, from 40% to 70% 7 yrs after birth.

22 L/S penalties interact with parents class situation and regimes Conclude: gendered polarisation in intergen. transmission of life chances… … results from choices made under constraints of national system of regulation …and this effect is intensified by concurrent rise in marital dissolution: He leaves with the human capital Shes left with the baby… …and another child grows up in poverty.


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