1. The Reduction of Working Hours as an Innovation for Global Labor Governance: A Quantitative Analysis on Working Hours and Gender Equality
- Author
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Pfenning, Jana and Freie Universität Berlin, Osteuropa-Institut Abt. Politik
- Subjects
gainful employment ,working hours ,Economics ,Arbeitsmarkt ,Gleichstellung ,Erwerbstätigkeit ,Geschlechterpolitik ,ddc:330 ,global labor governance regime ,gender ,Labor Market Research ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,affirmative action ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,Arbeitsmarktforschung ,Geschlecht ,reduction in working hours ,Wirtschaft ,SOEP ,Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung ,Arbeitszeit ,gender policy ,ddc:300 ,Arbeitszeitverkürzung ,Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies ,labor market - Abstract
The reduction of weekly working hours can lead to more gender equality on household level. In mixed-sex, two-adult households, the working hours of each household member have a significant effect on gender equality relevant variables. This was elaborated with a cross-sectional analysis of 2019 German Socio-Economic Panel data using OLS regressions with instrumental variables. Working hours have a strong negative effect on one's own household- and care time. Men or women having a reduced full-time work contract (32-36 hours per week stipulated in the work contract) creates more symmetry of paid- and unpaid work per sex. A partner's work time has a significantly negative effect on an individual's work time but a woman's work time is more influenced by her male partner's working hours than the other way around. The thesis finds evidence that if a man has a reduced full-time work contract, this encourages women to work more paid hours per week; for men it is the other way around. The effect of a partner's working time on an individual’s labor force participation is in all cases very small but significantly negative. The partner working under a reduced full-time work contract creates opposite results for men and women: It increases women's likelihood to participate in the labor market whereas it decreases men's probability to participate in the labor market.
- Published
- 2023