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Housework in Marital and Nonmarital Households

679

Citations

36

References

1994

Year

TLDR

Although much recent research has explored the division of household labor between husbands and wives, few studies have examined housework patterns across marital statuses. The study analyzes housework time differences between men and women across six living situations using the National Survey of Families and Households data and discusses implications for marital equity perceptions. They use data from the National Survey of Families and Households to compare housework time across these six living situations. Women spend more time on housework than men across all living situations, with the widest gender gap among married persons; housework time also varies by marital status, number of children, home ownership, and employment, and divorced and widowed men increase housework relative to other men, while adult children at home affect women's housework differently.

Abstract

Although much recent research has explored the division of household labor between husbands and wives, few studies have examined housework patterns across marital statuses. This paper uses data from the National Survey of Families and Households to analyze differences in time spent on housework by men and women in six different living situations: never married and living with parents, never married and living independently, cohabiting, married, divorced, and widowed. In all situations, women spend more time than men doing housework, but the gender gap is widest among married persons. The time women spend doing housework is higher among cohabitants than among the never-married, is highest in marriage, and is lower among divorcees and widows. Men's housework time is very similar across both never-married living situations, in cohabitation, and in marriage. However, divorced and widowed men do substantially more housework than any other group of men, and they are especially more likely than their married counterparts to spend more time cooking and cleaning. In addition to gender and marital status, housework time is affected significantly by several indicators of workload (e.g., number of children, home ownership) and time devoted to nonhousehold activities (e.g., paid employment, school enrollment)-most of these variables have greater effects on women's housework time than on men's. An adult son living at home increases women's housework, whereas an adult daughter at home reduces housework for women and men. These housework patterns are generally consistent with an emerging perspective that views housework as a symbolic enactment of gender relations. We discuss the implications of these findings for perceptions of marital equity.

References

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