Abstract
This article investigates how mothers' and fathers' daily time use changed across social classes from 1990 to 2013 in Germany. In the 2000s, Germany's adherence to the male breadwinner model was eroded by labor and family policy reforms typical of the adult worker model, which assumes individual self-sufficiency. The implications for gender and class inequality have been heatedly discussed. Drawing on the German Time Use Survey, I find that gender equality in the division of labor is greatest among full-Time dual-earner couples with standard schedules. The prevalence of this pattern increased among the middle-and upper-class in historically conservative western Germany, but declined across classes in formerly socialist eastern Germany. In parallel, nonstandard work patterns and dual-joblessness gained in importance among lower-class couples, particularly in eastern Germany. I conclude that the adult worker model benefited mothers with access to standard full-Time jobs but at the cost of greater class polarization.
Author supplied keywords
- J16 labor and demographic economics
- J48 labor and demographic economics
- J71 labor and demographic economics
- class
- demographic economics
- discrimination
- economics of gender
- employment
- family
- gender inequality
- labor discrimination
- non-labor discrimination
- particular labor markets
- public policy
- social policy
- welfare state
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Deuflhard, C. (2023). Who benefits from an adult worker model? Gender inequality in couples’ daily time use in Germany across time and social classes. Socio-Economic Review, 21(3), 1391–1419. https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwac065
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.