Macroeconomic policy often fails to recognise the disproportionate burden
of unpaid care work on women, and as a result reinforces both gender and
income inequalities. By providing detailed information on how this burden is
unequally distributed across gender, class, ethnicity and other socioeconomic
characteristics, time-use data can help in guiding more equitable allocations
of public resources and promoting government budget priorities that
recognise the importance of unpaid work, both for the economy and for
human wellbeing.
Funding
UK Department for International Development
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Fontana, M. (2014) 'Gender-Equitable Public Investment: How Time-Use Surveys Can Help', IDS Policy Briefing 82, Brighton: IDS