Analyzing a Shift in Household Labor
Read the following scenario and analyze the potential underlying factors that could explain the change in the couple's division of labor.
0
1
Tags
Sociology
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economics
Economy
CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Activity: Evaluate Statements on Gender Differences in Work and Wages
Analyzing the Impact of Education, Anti-Discrimination Laws, and Technology on Gender Roles
Policy Analysis for Equitable Household Labor
A couple, both highly-educated professionals with identical salaries, decide to have a child. Before the child's birth, they agree to share parenting and household responsibilities equally. However, after the child is born, the woman finds herself performing the majority of childcare and domestic chores, partly due to strong, unspoken expectations from their extended family and social circle that mothers are 'naturally' better caregivers. Which factor best explains this deviation from their original plan for an equal division of labor?
Analyzing a Shift in Household Labor
Match each scenario describing a household's division of labor with the primary alternative economic factor it illustrates.
Analyzing Bargaining Dynamics in Household Labor
True or False: If a household's division of labor does not maximize their total combined output (both from market work and home production), it definitively indicates an imbalance of power where one partner has compelled the other into a less-than-optimal arrangement.
A government introduces a policy providing a significant, non-transferable period of paid leave exclusively for new fathers. Years later, studies show that in households where fathers took this leave, the division of childcare and domestic work became more equal and remained so over time. Which of the following provides the most compelling explanation for this long-term shift?
Evaluating Explanations for the 'Second Shift'
A researcher observes that, on average, women in a particular society spend significantly more time on unpaid household chores and childcare than men, even when both partners have similar education levels and work full-time. The researcher concludes that this disparity is best explained by women having a stronger intrinsic preference for domestic activities. Which of the following statements presents the most significant challenge to this conclusion based on alternative economic theories of the household?
Interpreting Household Labor Imbalances
Social Norms and the Gender Division of Labor