Michael Horrigan opened the session.
Nancy Folbre first gave a brief history of the collection of time-use data. She
cited a 1878 letter from the Association for the Advancement of Women written to Congress
protesting that the Census Bureau did not pay attention to nor measure non-market work.
Housework was not considered "productive;" yet sexual prostitution was, and
prostitutes, unlike housewives, were classed as workers. Initially the BLS, headed by
Carroll Wright, did measure housework.
Folbre gave three reasons why it is important to collect information regarding time
use:
- Economics: the inability to measure non-market hours have biased statistics including
the SNA on economic growth.
- Sociology: time stress and our time crunch resonates with numerous welfare issues and
quality of life concerns which need to be studied and credited.
- Developmental psychology: how does time use affect child, family, and community
outcomes?
The language of human capital needs to be expanded. There are some outcomes for
families that do not affect economic growth but are still important. Folbre suggested
thinking in terms of the production of human capabilities. She cited Sen's
sense of capabilities, and Human Resource Accounting (see Jan W. van
Tongeren's paper, "Human Resource Accounting (HRA) for Integrated Socio-Economic
Analysis").
What kinds of synergies emerge from looking at these disciplines? Three arguments arise
when combining these disciplinary approaches:
- We should look more at quality, not just quantity of time. How time is organized and
structured is important. For example, the number of hours an adult spends on child care
may not be as important as adult availability or how adults spend the time.
- Using an opportunity cost value has big disadvantages. For example, it measures an hour
of leisure as being equal to an hour of child-care. An emphasis on capabilities
will intensify the dissatisfaction with the opportunities cost (OC) approach. Should an
hour of leisure be valued the same as an hour with a child or an hour preparing dinner?
This deflects attention from the process of household production.
- What are other inputs in addition to input time? We need to think more systematically
about what inputs other than time we should be surveying and how they affect outputs like
child development. We need to relate time to "child development" and
"educational attainment." We need multi-use surveys and to add time-use modules
to existing surveys, and vice versa.
In essence, how are we going to score the game? A danger is that such a multi-purpose
approach is considered over ambitious, but Folbre thinks we could try to do everything at
once.
Robert A. Pollak asked what can we say about the determinants of time use. Does
tax policy affect time use, and if so, how? What can we say about the consequences of time
use, especially with regard to children? Since we cannot do controlled experiments, how do
we identify the effects of time use? How do we deal with sample selection bias?
There are numerous index and measurement issues. Index number theory is the touchstone
in telling us what we are supposed to measure. But how do you measure national output?
What exactly are we trying to measure? How can we measure it?
We need theory about what we are trying to do with time-use. We need to consider
both market goods and services and non-market outputs. Measurement of non-market
outputs gives you the ability to talk about technical progress. We need a measure and a
concept of household technology and of joint production. We also have to look at both
market and non-market inputs including time and household capital. We need other
measures of productive inputs, not just capital.
Should we focus on non-market work or on non-market time? Does it matter
if the time now spent in market work was previously devoted to non-work or to leisure? Is
an increase in output really an increase in welfare if leisure is decreased? We need to
think in a broad theoretical way how to pick up on issues dealing with leisure as well as
issues of non-market work.
Barbara Fraumeni: "Human Capital, Intangible and Tangible Capital: Market
and Non-market Activities"
Fraumeni described an all-encompassing economic model which includes the Education,
Health, Market-all other, and Non-market sectors. She is focusing on investment activities
that take place in the non-market sector because the non-market sector has a tremendous
impact on the market sector.
She looks at non-human and human capital with an emphasis on human capital. There is
much human capital formation going on in the non-market sector.
The Additional Scope of Output What is in the economic model?
- Investment in Education
- Investment in Knowledge
Investment in R&D (research and development)
Investment in Other Knowledge (e.g., education)
- Borrowed R&D and Knowledge Capital
- Investment in OJT (on-the-job training)
- Investment in Health
- Investment in Children
Births
Raising Children
- Household Production and Leisure Consumption
- Other maintenance consumption
General Principles:
- Human capital output imputations from lifetime income (numbers will look huge)
- Value of imputations on the factor outlay side from the value of output minus the value
of other inputs
Exceptions:
a. Borrowed R&D and other knowledge
b. Other Knowledge
- Loss of experience and slower career advancement as well as the value of parent time
imputed income
Productivity is estimated incorrectly if you do not include non-market with market
activity.
Frank Stafford described the importance of time-use data. It will help to
highlight that investment is taking forms other than as savings. When looking at what is
contributing to economic growth, we need to think of information technology also. How are
shifts in demand for labor affecting household bargaining? Are we better off now than we
were 25 years ago?
Skill Biased Technical Change
A paper by B. Wolfe showed that there has been a substitution of knowledge workers for
other workers in nearly every industry. Skilled workers have extended their capacities to
perform tasks previously done by others.
What do we mean? Juster & Stafford mean skill-biased technical change, or rather,
progress. There are two types, skill-intensive and skill-extensive bias. This is
skill-extensive bias. It may take place in the non-market as well as the market sector. It
is part of the simple general equilibrium, the "big picture." It is not in a
traditional human capital format. There is heterogeneous skills and/or heterogeneous
consumer output.
How do we model this? Look at a General Equilibrium Model with heterogeneous human
capital. Consider two groups of workers with skill-extensive change. One high-skilled
group of workers with information technology now has greater productivity than they did
before. They do not reduce their wage even with an influx of new workers, and this lowers
the price of goods produced by less-skilled workers which drives down the wage.
Suggestions about what kinds of data we need:
Very comprehensive data
Contextual data
Spousal pairs and other family members
Multiple time diaries, over time to reduce bias
Non-diary measures
Comparable definitions across countries
Panel data
Group Discussion and Comments
Cathleen Zick, University of Utah, addressed to Folbre: There is little variation
in the technology measures we have. It works out to be constant. What would we be
measuring it in terms of home technology?
Timothy Smeeding, Syracuse University: He thinks computers (Internet access) are
the differentiating factor between families.
Zick: We can use computers outside the home and still uniform across families.
She agrees that it is important, but it is more difficult.
Folbre: Agrees in a cross-section, but across time and across families and
countries, it will be different. We also need to look at household-relevant
technologiesmarket substitutes, availability and costs.
Clyde Tucker, BLS: Suspects change is over time. Directed to Pollak: Does value
of leisure change in relation to the substitutes you have for time, i.e., whether you do
market work or non-market work?
Pollak: Responds that he does not know. He has not thought out all the
complexities. Heterogeneity is very important and difficult to handle. For example, a
surgeon painting his/her own house vs. somebody else doing it. Comment on the technology
issue: Cannot look at technology if we do not have an independent measure of output. The
difference will be in human capital, how we turn inputs into outputs.
Tucker: Leisure is one thing you cannot have others do for you.
Pollak: True. Think about the whole spectrum. Usually start with dichotomy. We
need to broaden our thinking, but we should not focus solely on the notion of goods and
services produced outside the market. We need to look at leisure too. An increase in
output is not necessarily an increase in well-being if leisure has decreased.
Robert Michael, University of Chicago: Where are we in terms of concept and
measurement? Opportunity cost of time is a correct concept but is not measured well, i.e.,
the wage rate is a bad measure. It should be measured some other way. We do not
want to throw out the concept of opportunity costs because the measures are bad. What is
the distinction between leisure and non-market time? Leisure is production of another
kind. There is much leisure that you cannot buy.
Folbre: She does not want to throw away idea of the opportunity cost concept,
but the problem with the OC concept is that it is a utility measure. She wants to look at
the actual value of transferable goods and services to others because of some
action. We are more interested in welfare of family/community than in utility of
individuals. What an activity produces is of interest. A most fascinating result from the
original Juster and Stafford study is that people value work more than leisure.
Pollak: A possible distinction between leisure and other non-market time is that
some uses of time produce some output that we can measure directly. When we talk about a
measure of output, it is important to ask, what is the output? Is output the
painted house or the painted house plus the satisfaction derived from painting the
house yourself? It's easy to run the models as if people do not care how they spend
their time, but this is not true.
Jan W. van Tongeren, United Nations: Commented on the concept of capital: We
need to broaden the concept from purely material capital (tangible) to intangible
capital. The link between capital and production should be expanded. We can see capital as
the store of wealth, e.g., art. This concept of capital as a store of wealth is also
relevant for human capital which can be used for leisure too, e.g., happiness, which is
not necessarily linked to production (of income). Some human capital is used to produce,
but not all of it, as we are not solely producers. It is hard to describe human capital in
only physical terms. We need to unlink capital from production.
Fraumeni: She is not sure how to use "other knowledge. " The model is
tied to an income-type concept, but there is something more going on.
Jacqueline Eccles, University of Michigan: First, what role does social capital
as an output play in economic models? Second, psychologists have spent a lot of time
thinking about how to value "leisure," including personal pleasure. There is
much talk about individual identities and social identities. These are aspects of both the
person and their membership within a group. When thinking about investments in families as
units, consider what function the investment plays in these units. Consider the aspects of
a person and the aspects of groups. For example, father may paint his house to be role
model for his kids, showing that there is "attainment value" from the activity.
Activities convey messages about values and who we are.
Folbre: Good point. How do people talk about time use and convey time use? Some
work is being done on "social capital"community time, but the use of the
word "capital" may not be a good idea here. We need to think about qualitative
dimensions. Some forms of social capital are good, but some are bad (the Junior League vs.
gangs). Usually more (capital) is better, but this is not necessarily a good thing.
Katharine Abraham: She is struck by the discrepancy between how much time people
say they work and how much they actually work. This might be changing social expectations.
Study has had people indicate what activities are work and what are leisurehard to
quantify because one person's work is another's leisure.
Andrew Harvey, Saint Mary's University: His work has been focused on measuring
outputs. The same activity can be coded the same or differently when done at different
times by the same person. The study asked people to indicate which activities are work and
which are leisure. This is hard to quantify because one person's work is
another's leisure. Leisure may be an output.
Smeeding: The concept of joint production (getting two things done at once) is
very important. There are negatives as well as positives, e.g., caring for someone.
Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California at Santa Barbara: We need to
appreciate the gulf between the conceptual frameworks and empirical capabilities.
"Irrational" behavior exists within households. Families have been devoted to a
consistent rationing of household labor. The surgeon who appears irrational by painting
the house may just be sending a message about how a parent should spend their weekend. If
you are invested in a production of identity, work and leisure become the occasion for
jointly produced outputs of complicated social identities. Also there is joint production
of gender in households as well as of goods and services, and a production of identity, of
inequality.
Pollak: The notion of attainment value is important for discussing determinants
of time use. What does attainment value have to do with measuring output? It probably does
matter, but how?
Eccles: What some of us call outputs, others call inputs.
Pollak: We need a theoretical framework. It could give us answers to what counts
and what does not count.
Folbre: What we are engaged in, here, is a production of identity, a process of
challenging the income accounts approach from economists.
J. Steven Landefeld, Bureau of Economic Analysis: National income accountants
have never claimed that GDP is a measure of welfare. GDP is not a welfare measure; perhaps
we need additional measures. The accountants have no problem including all these different
things when measuring GDP, it's just that they are very hard to measure.
Folbre: This is not a critique of GDP per se, but acknowledgment of the tendency
to measure success by national income accounts. We are criticizing the interpretation and
use of the measure. It's a matter of changing the cultural idea of winners and
losers.
Fraumeni: In the model, we are trying to construct a measure of GDP that
includes market and non-market production. We are not trying to measure welfare either.
Sandra Hofferth, University of Michigan: The question is, who is receiving
return from non-market work? The parent? The child? Society? Another individual? Oneself?
Who benefits? There are different levels of accounting.
Fraumeni: That's true. She has not dealt with the levels yet.
Luisella Goldschmidt-Clermont, France: What about the time-use survey itself?
What have we learned in the past century on what we can get from a time-use survey?
Folbre: It is important to have a broad theoretical discussion and a large-scale
survey that allows us to contextualize time-use better. The implicit agreement is that
there is a need for time-use surveys. We want to develop a survey that can get at
necessary information. "Time use" is forcing us to question and rethink basic
economic theoretical concepts.
Miron Straff, National Academy of Sciences: Is there an impediment to developing
measures? Can we not separate the measurement of time from the experience of
time? How can we get a measurement of time that is rational? There are different values of
time for different people.
Folbre: The same objections and rules apply to money. Some people get much more
pleasure from $10 than others.
Straff: No, they get more pleasure from $10 than $5. We need to get at the
measurement.
Folbre: She wants to collect data in such a way that persons from other
disciplines can use it too. The interdisciplinary approach is helpful and separates the
division of labor.
Horrigan: There will come a day when we need to make fundamental decisions about
what data we will collect and for what purpose the data will be collected. This will come
down to methodology of collection. There is a gulf between theory and measurement. The
data collected may not be data to inform theories.
Tucker: We need to talk to people to get a real idea.
Robin Douthitt, University of Wisconsin-Madison: She has good standards on how
we measure time use. We need to be able to get at context. The measurement differences
between consumption, production and leisure are only going to worsen as we look at
increasing technology and more people working at home. We need to look closely at how
people perceive the use of time. How will physical separation, i.e., working at home,
impact families? Will it be a benefit?
Thomas Juster, University of Michigan: Every activity produces essentially two
products, an output and satisfaction, i.e., process benefits. A finished product may also
give satisfaction to others. The surgeon gets satisfaction from painting the house, but
the painted house gives satisfaction to the family and to people driving by as well. Work
and play are social activities, whereas housecleaning is a solitary activity. We want to
get a measure of all outputs, e.g., the painting and the painted house. We want to get
satisfaction measures to see why people want to do the things they do, but we can probably
only get at the average, we cannot get this "at the margin," for modeling. An
objective is to produce a database that can be used for modeling behavior.
Session ended at scheduled time.
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