| Literature DB >> 32922242 |
Daniela Del Boca1, Noemi Oggero2, Paola Profeta3, Mariacristina Rossi1.
Abstract
Evidence from past economic crises indicates that recessions often affect men's and women's employment differently, with a greater impact on male-dominated sectors. The current COVID-19 crisis presents novel characteristics that have affected economic, health and social phenomena over wide swaths of the economy. Social distancing measures to combat the spread of the virus, such as working from home and school closures, have placed an additional tremendous burden on families. Using new survey data collected in April 2020 from a representative sample of Italian women, we analyse the effects of working arrangements due to COVID-19 on housework, childcare and home schooling among couples where both partners work. Our results show that most of the additional housework and childcare associated to COVID-19 falls on women while childcare activities are more equally shared within the couple than housework activities. According to our empirical estimates, changes to the amount of housework done by women during the emergency do not seem to depend on their partners' working arrangements. With the exception of those continuing to work at their usual place of work, all of the women surveyed spend more time on housework than before. In contrast, the amount of time men devote to housework does depend on their partners' working arrangements: men whose partners continue to work at their usual workplace spend more time on housework than before. The link between time devoted to childcare and working arrangements is more symmetric, with higher percentages of both women and men spending less time with their children if they continue to work away from home. For home schooling, too, parents who continue to go to their usual workplace after the lockdown are less likely to spend greater amounts of time with their children than before. Similar results emerge for the partners of women not working before the emergency. Finally, analysis of work-life balance satisfaction shows that working women with children aged 0-5 are those who find balancing work and family more difficult during COVID-19. The work-life balance is especially difficult to achieve for those with partners who continue to work outside the home during the emergency. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Childcare; Housework; Work arrangements
Year: 2020 PMID: 32922242 PMCID: PMC7474798 DOI: 10.1007/s11150-020-09502-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Econ Househ ISSN: 1569-5239
Fig. 1Number of COVID-19 cases by Italian region, as of 28 April 2020. Data retrieved from the Italian Ministry of Health
Fig. 2Number of COVID-19 cases by country, as of 28 April 2020. The graph includes the 20 most-affected European countries. Data retrieved from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control
Descriptive statistics on working women
| Age | 43.88 | 9.21 | 26 | 64 | 520 |
| Having a degree | 0.47 | 0.50 | 0 | 1 | 520 |
| North | 0.54 | 0.50 | 0 | 1 | 520 |
| Centre | 0.20 | 0.40 | 0 | 1 | 520 |
| Having children | 0.67 | 0.47 | 0 | 1 | 520 |
| Number of children | 1.66 | 0.74 | 1 | 7 | 350 |
| Number of children age 0–5 | 0.36 | 0.59 | 0 | 3 | 350 |
| Number of children age 6–10 | 0.37 | 0.53 | 0 | 2 | 350 |
| Number of children age 11–14 | 0.25 | 0.47 | 0 | 2 | 350 |
| Number of children age ≥15 | 0.68 | 0.89 | 0 | 5 | 350 |
The sample is made up of coupled women where both partners were working before the emergency
Fig. 3Percentage of working women and their partner by working arrangement during the COVID-19 emergency
Fig. 4Percentage of working women and their partners by hours of housework per day before the COVID-19 emergency
Fig. 5Percentage of working women and their partners doing more housework and spending more hours in childcare during the COVID-19 emergency
Housework and childcare
| Partners working at the usual workplace | Partners working from home | Partners not working because of the emergency |
|---|---|---|
| (a) Percentage of men and women doing more housework during the COVID-19 emergency by working arrangement | ||
| Women working at the usual workplace | ||
| Women 49% | Women 40% | Women 61% |
| Partners 28% | Partners 55% | Partners 58% |
| N = 57 | N = 20 | N = 33 |
| Women working from home | ||
| Women 78% | Women 65% | Women 64% |
| Partners 28% | Partners 40% | Partners 58% |
| N = 65 | N = 111 | N = 55 |
| Women not working because of the emergency | ||
| Women 82% | Women 81% | Women 74% |
| Partners 22% | Partners 24% | Partners 47% |
| N = 49 | N = 27 | N = 103 |
Multivariate regression model of doing more housework during the COVID-19 emergency
| (1) | (2) | |
|---|---|---|
| Woman’s age | 0.001 (0.002) | −0.007*** (0.002) |
| Woman having a degree | 0.014 (0.042) | 0.045 (0.044) |
| Woman having children | 0.059 (0.044) | 0.043 (0.045) |
| Woman working at the usual workplace | −0.283*** (0.057) | 0.130** (0.059) |
| Woman working from home | −0.073 (0.049) | 0.104** (0.051) |
| Partner working at the usual workplace | 0.062 (0.050) | −0.284*** (0.052) |
| Partner working from home | −0.004 (0.054) | −0.175*** (0.056) |
| North | 0.042 (0.048) | 0.041 (0.050) |
| Centre | 0.112* (0.060) | −0.007 (0.062) |
| Constant | 0.612*** (0.114) | 0.688*** (0.119) |
| Observations | 520 | 520 |
| R-squared | 0.056 | 0.078 |
Coefficient estimates from OLS regressions. The sample is made up of coupled women where both partners were working before the emergency. The baseline category for working arrangements is “Not working because of the emergency.” Standard errors in parentheses
***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1
Multivariate regression model of spending more hours in childcare and doing more home schooling during the COVID-19 emergency
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Woman’s age | −0.003 (0.004) | 0.005 (0.004) | 0.004 (0.004) | 0.002 (0.004) |
| Woman having a degree | 0.113** (0.052) | 0.158*** (0.053) | 0.090* (0.053) | 0.136** (0.053) |
| Number of children age 0–5 | 0.081 (0.057) | 0.161*** (0.058) | 0.092 (0.058) | 0.068 (0.058) |
| Number of children age 6–10 | 0.168*** (0.054) | 0.090 (0.055) | 0.296*** (0.055) | 0.161*** (0.055) |
| Number of children age 11–14 | 0.092 (0.058) | 0.050 (0.060) | 0.122** (0.060) | 0.034 (0.059) |
| Number of children age ≥15 | 0.016 (0.038) | −0.105*** (0.039) | −0.031 (0.039) | −0.071* (0.039) |
| Woman working at the usual workplace | −0.270*** (0.069) | 0.018 (0.070) | −0.123* (0.070) | 0.047 (0.070) |
| Woman working from home | −0.066 (0.061) | 0.018 (0.063) | −0.098 (0.063) | 0.024 (0.062) |
| Partner working at the usual workplace | −0.000 (0.060) | −0.215*** (0.061) | −0.011 (0.061) | −0.191*** (0.061) |
| Partner working from home | 0.065 (0.067) | −0.075 (0.069) | 0.062 (0.069) | −0.106 (0.069) |
| North | 0.003 (0.058) | −0.015 (0.059) | −0.038 (0.059) | 0.024 (0.059) |
| Centre | 0.082 (0.073) | −0.026 (0.074) | −0.021 (0.074) | 0.022 (0.074) |
| Constant | 0.638*** (0.186) | 0.275 (0.191) | 0.206 (0.191) | 0.250 (0.190) |
| Observations | 350 | 350 | 350 | 350 |
| R-squared | 0.147 | 0.160 | 0.160 | 0.122 |
Coefficient estimates from OLS regressions. The sample is made up of coupled women where both partners were working before the emergency. The baseline category for working arrangements is “Not working because of the emergency. Home schooling is included in childcare. Standard errors in parentheses
***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1
Multivariate regression model of doing more housework, spending more hours in childcare and spending more hours in home schooling during the COVID-19 emergency, for women who were not working before the emergency
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Woman’s age | −0.001 (0.003) | −0.004 (0.002) | −0.001 (0.005) | −0.009** (0.005) | −0.008* (0.004) | −0.005 (0.004) |
| Woman having a degree | −0.009 (0.072) | −0.008 (0.066) | 0.110 (0.079) | 0.078 (0.076) | 0.042 (0.071) | −0.075 (0.065) |
| Having children | 0.148** (0.062) | 0.008 (0.057) | ||||
| Number of children age 0–5 | −0.010 (0.074) | −0.041 (0.072) | 0.097 (0.067) | 0.010 (0.062) | ||
| Number of children age 6–10 | 0.287*** (0.062) | 0.191*** (0.060) | 0.388*** (0.056) | 0.167*** (0.051) | ||
| Number of children age 11–14 | 0.096 (0.066) | −0.038 (0.064) | 0.129** (0.060) | 0.014 (0.055) | ||
| Number of children age ≥15 | 0.001 (0.046) | −0.018 (0.044) | 0.017 (0.041) | −0.000 (0.038) | ||
| Partner working at the usual workplace | −0.095 (0.058) | −0.263*** (0.053) | −0.014 (0.063) | −0.219*** (0.061) | 0.020 (0.057) | −0.020 (0.052) |
| Partner working from home | −0.116* (0.068) | −0.144** (0.062) | −0.040 (0.075) | −0.073 (0.073) | −0.068 (0.067) | 0.070 (0.062) |
| North | −0.068 (0.057) | 0.082 (0.053) | −0.062 (0.061) | 0.089 (0.060) | −0.038 (0.055) | 0.020 (0.051) |
| Centre | −0.018 (0.072) | 0.078 (0.066) | 0.066 (0.079) | −0.013 (0.077) | −0.012 (0.071) | −0.097 (0.065) |
| Constant | 0.525*** (0.147) | 0.577*** (0.135) | 0.449* (0.240) | 0.858*** (0.233) | 0.614*** (0.216) | 0.395** (0.198) |
| Observations | 381 | 381 | 298 | 298 | 298 | 298 |
| R-squared | 0.031 | 0.075 | 0.132 | 0.152 | 0.285 | 0.101 |
Coefficient estimates from OLS regressions. The sample is made up of coupled women where partners were working before the emergency. Mean values of the dependent variables from column (1) to (6) are 0.52, 0.32, 0.51, 0.41, 0.43, and 0.21, respectively. Standard errors in parentheses
***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1
Multivariate regression model of reporting that “an excessive amount of work/housework made it more difficult to balance work and family” during the COVID-19 emergency
| (1) | (2) | |
|---|---|---|
| Woman’s age | −0.002 (0.004) | 0.009** (0.004) |
| Woman having a degree | 0.069 (0.055) | 0.045 (0.056) |
| Number of children age 0–5 | 0.055 (0.059) | 0.176*** (0.060) |
| Number of children age 6–10 | 0.068 (0.057) | 0.088 (0.058) |
| Number of children age 11–14 | −0.029 (0.061) | 0.060 (0.062) |
| Number of children age ≥15 | −0.049 (0.040) | −0.079* (0.041) |
| Woman working at the usual workplace | 0.284*** (0.072) | 0.020 (0.073) |
| Woman working from home | 0.180*** (0.064) | 0.043 (0.065) |
| Partner working at the usual workplace | −0.109* (0.063) | 0.112* (0.064) |
| Partner working from home | −0.093 (0.071) | 0.104 (0.072) |
| North | −0.006 (0.060) | −0.011 (0.061) |
| Centre | 0.008 (0.076) | −0.016 (0.077) |
| Constant | 0.374* (0.195) | −0.100 (0.198) |
| Observations | 350 | 350 |
| R-squared | 0.082 | 0.087 |
Coefficient estimates from OLS regressions. The sample is made up of coupled women where both partners were working before the emergency. Standard errors in parentheses
***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1