Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Balancing family and work in everyday life: a European comparison Dr. Katja Branger.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LABOUR FORCE SURVEY The aim is to show that only an integrated approach to these data makes the contribution of Italian women to the economy more visible.
Advertisements

Carers and former carers in Italy Licia Boccaletti - London - May 2010.
The parenthood effect: what explains the increase in gender inequality when British couples become parents? Pia Schober London School of Economics.
The Role of Statistics in relation to the WLB Policy and it’s Implementation 12 Nov Seung-Ah Hong(KWDI) International Seminar on Gender Statistics.
Unpaid care activities among the Indigenous population: Analysis of the 2011 Census Mandy Yap and Dr. Nicholas Biddle This work is funded by the Commonwealth.
Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Sub-dimension 3b: Working time arrangements Silvia Perrenoud Meeting on Measuring.
Economic advantage and disadvantage: women in Australia Presentation to the National Council of Women of Australia Dr Marcia Keegan Research Fellow, National.
Expert Conference Accompanying the Informal Meeting of Ministers for Family and Gender Equality: Equal parenthood – a new role model? Paola Panzeri - COFACE.
Marriage, Work & Economics Michael Itagaki Sociology 275, Marriage and Family.
The Issue of Work-Life Balance in Bulgaria Siyka Kovacheva University of Plovdiv Bulgaria.
Chapter 12 Work and Family. Chapter Outline  The Labor Force - A Social Invention  The Traditional Model: Provider Husbands Homemaking Wives  Women.
Education and entitlement to household income. A gendered longitudinal analysis of British couples Jerome De Henau and Susan Himmelweit IAFFE annual conference,
Position of women in society and labour market Case study: Bulgaria.
27 th February 2013 Closing the Gender Gap ACT NOW Ana LLENA-NOZAL Economist, Social Policy Division, OECD.
1 Reconciling work and family lives Production and reproduction –working mothers and caring fathers : policy implications ISPA Annual Conference Friday.
Trend in use of health care services and long term care Results of AGIR - WP 2 and WP4A Dr. Erika Schulz.
Articulating Work and Family in Belgium : a Gendered Use of Institutional Measures Bernard Fusulier Université catholique de Louvain
OECD, Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs Social Policy in the OECD: what lessons for Chile? National Social Security Meeting, Santiago.
The Effects of Policies of Different Welfare Regimes on Intra-Household Inequalities Susan Himmelweit
SOSC 200Y Gender and Society Lecture 17: Conflicting roles - working mother.
1 THE PENSION GAP AND POVERTY OF ELDERLY WOMEN July 2008.
Leave policies within the family policies in the Czech Republic Jiřina Kocourková, Ph.D. Department of Demography and Geodemography Faculty of Science.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Statistical Division Producing gender statistics through population censuses: UNECE Linda Hooper, Statistician.
E quality between Women and Men in the EU: recent developments 11th LPR Network seminar Tallinn, September 2014 Muriel Bissières, European Commission.
Is the progress to gender equality stalled? If so, why?
1 "Female part-time existing possibilities at executive levels and existence of certification systems regarding gender policies in enterprises and public.
Thema, Bereich, Autor, Version, Datum1 Female Breadwinner s.
1 3c: Balancing work and non-working life Mark Feldman Central Bureau of Statistics, Israel Meeting of the Group of Experts on Quality of Employment, Geneva,
The experience of the parental leave system in Iceland Norsk kvinnesaksforening - fagseminar Oslo February 3, 2009 Svala Jónsdóttir Centre for Gender Equality.
Trends in Employment How many hours weekly do we work for pay?
LP&R Seminar| pag. 1 Are career break leaves a solution for the time squeeze? Time use comparisons of men and women with a different work load Jessie Vandeweyer.
ICMEC seminar, 22 February 2010 The provision of child care services; the Barcelona targets revisited Janneke Plantenga
A presentation for the Women’s Institute for a Secure Retirement February 28, 2008 Barbara D. Bovbjerg Director Education, Workforce, and Income Security.
May 13, 2011 The gender pay gap in the European union: Quantitative and qualitative indicators DULBEA Department of Applied Economics of the Université.
STATE OF ART IN GREEK FAMILY
A Strategy for Securing Sustainable Future Care and Productivity Potentials in an Ageing Society A European Comparison Annette Franke Goethe.
Statistics to Support Policies on Work and Life Balance Kyunghee Kim Employment Statistics Division Statistics Korea.
GENDER INDICATORS International Conference on Reconciliation: “Tips to top reconciliation: work it out, home it in: por una conciliación compartida”
McGraw-Hill © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 9-1 Chapter Nine l Work and Families.
Gender Inequalities. Changes in Society Average age when married increased 7 years from (men: 35, women: 32) Increasing divorce rate (1971:
International overview of fathers and leave based on 2012 review Peter Moss Institute of Education University of London 1.
Disaggregation of data by background variables – age, households, socio-economic categories Bratislava, 5-7 May 2003 Stein Terje Vikan Statistical Division.
An exploration of female home ownership patterns in Australia 18 th European Real Estate Society Conference Eindhoven, 15 th – 18 th June 2011 Valerie.
Gender Statistics in the Labour Market Angela Me UNECE Statistics Division.
Work and Families Mothers enter labor force Implications for family life Marital power and work Role overload, conflict, and spillover Work-family life.
TIME USE SURVEY Seminar on Time Use Surveys Brussels, 12 October 2006 SEMINAR ON TIME USE SURVEYS Brussels, 12 October 2006.
` Edinburgh One Parent Families Scotland Lone Parents in Scotland.
Using Egalitarian Items to Measure Gender Role Equality: a Cross National Experiment Michael Braun GESIS-ZUMA Mannheim, Germany 3 rd ESRC Research Methods.
Balancing work and non-working life Alona Shemesh Labour Division, Central Bureau of Statistics, Jerusalem, Israel June 2008.
Conflict Conflict is natural in marriage because of the challenges that individuals face in their lives together!
Social Change and the Family 1 © PDST Home Economics.
LFS Training Dataset Alexander Mack GESIS – Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences DwB-Training Course on EU‐LFS, September 2014, Ljubljana.
11 Work and Families Laura MacIntyre.
Gender Equality and Care Choices in the Light of Population Ageing (WP 16.4) Attila Bartha, Olena Fedyuk, Viola Zentai (Center for Policy Studies, Central.
Gender and Labor Market Issues Workshop Capacity Building for Implementation of the GAP in ECA by Sarosh Sattar Senior Economist October 23, 2008.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Statistical Division UNECE’s experience in producing two measures of gender pay gap Work session on Gender.
Hessian Ministry of Economics, Transport, Urban and Regional Development Different approaches of the State of Hessen to adapt labour and qualification.
Reconciliation of family and work life Nato Kurshitashvili Serbia,18-19 May 2010 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Statistical Division.
Public Economics: Welfare states and inequalities University of Castellanza Session #1(b) Employment and Euroscelerosis 26 March 2014.
1 What can companies do for the professional advancement of women in the social and health sector in Germany? Dr. des. Esther Ochoa Fernández Researcher.
26 April 2010 Session I-B: issues - other than GPG - related to Gender differences in economic security Didier Dupré, Eurostat, discussant
Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO SESSION II Gender analysis of key Census topics: experience with the previous census.
Quality in work Dimensions and indicators in the EES.
EXPLORING MARRIAGES AND FAMILY, 2 ND EDITION Karen Seccombe © 2015, 2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Families and the Work.
Measuring the population: importance of demographic indicators for gender analysis Workshop Title Location and Date.
Measuring work and economic activity Workshop Title Location and Date.
Maternal Movements into Part time Employment: What is the Penalty? Jenny Willson, Department of Economics, University of Sheffield.
The Nordic Way: The role of social protection systems in supporting gender equality and sustainable growth. Ass. professor Dr Åsa Löfström Umea School.
Integrating Gender into Population and Housing Censuses
Presentation transcript:

Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Balancing family and work in everyday life: a European comparison Dr. Katja Branger Social Analysis Section Presentation at the UNECE Work Session on Gender Statistics Geneva, 6-8 October 2008

2 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Family and work balance as a gender topic Women, particularly mothers, are now more often economically active than in the past In families it is increasingly the case that both parents work The challenge of combining family and professional life concerns every economically active member of the family as well as the family as a whole => What do the indicators of the UNECE Gender Database show us concerning family and work balance from a gender perspective and in international comparison?

3 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Indicators analysed in this paper Working patterns in couple households Time spent in paid and unpaid work Part-time employment of men and women Other indicators to include in future work Employment rate by age of youngest child Employment rate by number of children under 16 Employment rate by age and marital status One-parent families and children by sex of parent Unemployment by age Gender pay gap

4 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Countries included in the analysis are those with data in UNECE Database for the three indicators considered: Belgium Germany Hungary Italy Spain Sweden Switzerland

5 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Working patterns in couple households Solutions for balancing professional and family life are usually found in the division of labour between the two partners. Couples’ working patterns illustrate the division of labour. Data show that traditional patterns with the man working full-time are the most common in all countries, occurring in at least 8 in 10 couple households.

6 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO

7

8 Part-time work Part-time work offers the possibility to solve or mitigate the problem of balancing work and family. But it can also be a reflection of limited mothers’ participation in the labour force due to insufficient childcare services, as it is the case in Switzerland: mothers who wish to be economically active often cannot find an adequate (and affordable) childcare solution. Part-time work not only has the positive aspect of enabling people to reconcile professional and private life. It can also mean job insecurity, poor social welfare provision (e.g. in old age) and sometimes fewer opportunities to pursue vocational training or build a career.

9 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Part-time employed persons in general and those aged 25 to 49 living in couple households, in % Source: UNECE Gender Statistics Database

10 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Paid and unpaid work In all countries there is a clearly gendered role division: looking after the home and the family is still the woman’s or mother’s job, even in countries where women, especially mothers often have paid employment due to their increased participation in the labour force. In most countries studied, women shoulder a greater total workload of both paid and unpaid work, apart from Switzerland and Sweden, where the burden is shared equally between the sexes.

11 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Time spent in paid and unpaid work, Hours per week, persons aged 15+ Source: UNECE Gender Statistics Database

12 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Summary In most countries a rather traditional division of labour is still very widespread: men working full-time and women working part-time or economically inactive. Compared to fathers, mothers are faced with much higher demands when combining family and professional life since in most cases they are responsible for looking after the household. Part-time work represents a solution to the problem of balancing work and family, but it can also have negative consequences and be a reflection of insufficient childcare services. The working patterns of couple households change fundamentally as soon as children are present, depending of their age.

13 Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA Federal Statistical Office FSO Further work Completing analysis with indicators mentioned previously Including the evolution over time