Household Production Theory Treat Household as a Firm Output is Utility G=goods T= Time U = F(G, T)
-
Upload
spencer-morris -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of Household Production Theory Treat Household as a Firm Output is Utility G=goods T= Time U = F(G, T)
Household Production Theory
Treat Household as a Firm
Output is Utility
G=goods
T= Time
U = F(G, T)
Household Production Theory
Home Time
Goods
Isoquant; Slope = -(MUt /MUG)
U
Budget constraint; Slope = -(W/P)
t0
G0
Wages and Goods Intensive vs Time Intensive Home Production
How do we cook?
Huffman, 2006. “The Story Behind the Post-War Decline in Women’s Housework: Prices, Income, Family Size and Technology Effects in a Demand System
Huffman, 2006. “The Story Behind the Post-War Decline in Women’s Housework: Prices, Income, Family Size and Technology Effects in a Demand System
Daily time allocation to meal preparation, by gender and income
Lisa Mancino and Constance Newman Who Has Time To Cook? How Family Resources Influence Food Preparation May 2007. USDA ERRN 40. http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/ERR40/err40.pdf
Daily time allocation to meal preparation for women, by income and market work intensity
Lisa Mancino and Constance Newman Who Has Time To Cook? How Family Resources Influence Food Preparation May 2007. USDA ERRN 40. http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/ERR40/err40.pdf
Births per 1000 women aged 15-44, 1920-1998
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
Year
Rat
e
Depression
Quantity Quality Tradeoff in Fertility Behavior
How do wages affect household size?
Mammen, Kristen and Christina Paxson. “Women’s Work and Economic Development.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 14 (Fall 2000): 141-162.
Mammen, Kristen and Christina Paxson. “Women’s Work and Economic Development.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 14 (Fall 2000): 141-162.
How should spouses divide market and home time?
How do relative wages affect time allocation?
Weekly Hours Spent in Work and Leisure by Men and Women,Age 25-64, in the United States, 1965–1981
Average time in home production per week for married men and women
Men 17.7
Women 29.8
Men spend 9 more hours per week in the labor market
Hersch and Stratton, Journal of Human Resources, Winter 2002.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Variations in Time Use at Stages of the Life Cycle.” Monthly Labor Review 128 (September 2005): 38-45.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Variations in Time Use at Stages of the Life Cycle.” Monthly Labor Review 128 (September 2005): 38-45.
Father
Michael Burda, Daniel Hamermesh, and Philippe Weil. 2006. "TOTAL WORK, GENDER AND SOCIAL NORMS,"
Equal minutes per day
Fitted line, nonMeditaranean countries
Fitted line, Meditaranean countries
Minutes per day spent in total market and nonmarket work for men and women, 21 countries
U.S. difference is 4 U.S. difference is 4 minutesminutes