Household and Labor Market Linkages
The link between the household and the labor market is
particularly important. Specialization of labor within the household-whether
individually chosen. socially determined. or legally induced-can accentuate
gender inequalities in the formal and informal labor markets by leaving most of
the unpaid work to women. This situation arises from convention rather than from
comparative advantage Inadequate public and community services. transport. and
housing also often have an uneven effect on the way men and women spend their
time and can increase the demand for goods produced at home using unpaid labor
(Moser 1994) Thus women may spend its much (or more time on unpaid work as on
market work. In some countries this unpaid work contributes as much as one-third
to the economy recorded GDP-and even mote to the welfare of poor families.
The amount of time women contribute to household production and
maintenance, direct income generation. and family care combined is widely held
to exceed that of men Analysis of data from Bangladesh. Botswana. Ghana. Kenya.
Pakistan. the Philippines. and Zambia on how rural women spend their time
confirms that, although use of time by women, and by different generations of
women varies according to location. available technology. household
characteristics. and cultural norms. gender bias in time use is widespread.
Women are generally responsible for collecting fuelwood and
carrying water. Girls and alder women often do most of this work, although
cultural norms in some countries affect women s mobility. The amount of time
allocated to these activities is influenced by seasonal patterns of agricultural
activity. the availability of substitute goods and services. and environmental
changes. A study in Nepal, for instance, found that deforestation associated
with a 75 percent rise in the time per trip would increase the time spent
gathering fuelwood by 45 percent for all adults and by 50-60 percent for women.
In addition to fuel and water collection, child care is another
activity that dominates women s time-although. considering the importance of
children to future household welfare, the amount of direct time spent with
children is limited. The seven-country study suggests that more time is spent on
child cat-e in female-headed households. Female-headed households tend to have
high dependency ratios and relatively large numbers of children, Implying more
child-care time overall, but not necessarily on a per child basis. (Kumar and
Hotchkiss 1988).
When a large proportion of women's use of time goes unrecorded
the design of projects and policies can yield false evaluations of costs and
benefits. For example, women's unpaid work may be assumed to have zero value. As
a result, women's response to changing incentives may be predicted as being
higher than their time constraints actually allow. Project benefits-such as the
time saved by locating piped water close to homes or by expanding rural
electrification-may also be undervalued. Conversely, the benefits of treeing up
time may be far more significant than might have been thought. A study in
Tanzania, for example. shows that relieving certain time constraints in a
community of smallholder coffee and banana growers increases household cash
incomes by 10 percent, labor productivity by 15 percent, and capital
productivity by 44 percent (Tibaijuka
1994).