ArXiv TLDR

Gender, Unpaid Work, and Social Norms in Young Italian Families: Evidence from Couples Time Diaries

🐦 Tweet
2604.13896

C. Monfardini, E. Pisanelli

econ.GN

TLDR

This study uses time diaries from Italian couples to show persistent gender inequality in unpaid work, childcare, and leisure, even in dual full-time households.

Key contributions

  • Women perform significantly more unpaid work and childcare; men do more paid work and enjoy more child-free leisure.
  • Gender asymmetries in unpaid work persist even when both partners work full-time, challenging assumptions about equality.
  • Traditional gender attitudes, particularly among men, correlate with lower male participation in domestic tasks and childcare.

Why it matters

This paper highlights how deep-seated gender inequalities in daily life persist within couples, even with increased female labor force participation. It underscores the role of traditional gender norms in shaping the unequal distribution of unpaid work and discretionary leisure time.

Original Abstract

Why do large gender inequalities in everyday life persist even as women strengthen their attachment to paid work? Existing evidence shows that women continue to do more unpaid work than men, but much of that evidence is based on individual diaries, says little about how inequality is jointly organized within couples, and rarely links daily time allocation to directly measured gender attitudes. This paper addresses that gap using the TIMES Observatory, an original survey of 1,928 co-resident couples with at least one child younger than 11 in Emilia-Romagna or Campania. The data combine matched partner diaries for one weekday and one weekend day with rich socio-economic information and direct measures of gender norms. We document three main findings. First, women do substantially more unpaid work and spend more time with children, while men do more paid work and enjoy more leisure without children. Second, these asymmetries remain sizeable even among dual full-time couples, implying that stronger female labor-market attachment does not by itself equalize daily life. Third, more traditional gender attitudes - especially among men - are descriptively associated with lower male participation in childcare and domestic work and with wider gaps in discretionary leisure. The analysis is descriptive rather than causal, but it shows that gender inequality within couples is visible not only in the amount of work performed, but also in the distribution of time that is genuinely discretionary.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.