Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week

This paper investigates the gendered division of labor in different types of domestic work within married couples in contemporary Japan. We analyze routine housework such as cleaning and cooking, non-routine housework such as home repairs, and care work by using the 2016 Survey of Time Use and Leisu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hertog, E, Kan, M-Y, Shirakawa, K, Chiba, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology, University of Calgary 2021
_version_ 1826307778715582464
author Hertog, E
Kan, M-Y
Shirakawa, K
Chiba, R
author_facet Hertog, E
Kan, M-Y
Shirakawa, K
Chiba, R
author_sort Hertog, E
collection OXFORD
description This paper investigates the gendered division of labor in different types of domestic work within married couples in contemporary Japan. We analyze routine housework such as cleaning and cooking, non-routine housework such as home repairs, and care work by using the 2016 Survey of Time Use and Leisure Activities (Japan’s national time diary survey). Our core analysis is done using ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions on total domestic work time, routine housework time, non-routine housework time, and care time. We find that women’s domestic work time dwarfs men’s, and there is some variation by day of the week and education. On weekdays domestic work is almost exclusively the domain of women. On weekends we find evidence of compensatory behaviors for both men and women. Men, especially those with university education, catch up on all types of unpaid work while women, especially those with tertiary education, catch up on unpaid work mostly by spending more time caring for children. Looking at the family balance in sharing domestic labor we find that men increase their time on unpaid work on weekends proportionately more than women do. Consequently, within couples, wives’ share of all types of unpaid work is around 10% smaller on weekends compared to weekdays. In couples where wives have tertiary education, there is an additional reduction by several percentage points in their weekend share of domestic work time compared to weekdays. Our findings suggest that Japanese men’s long work hours contribute to gender inequality in domestic work participation. We also find that university education is associated with more equal sharing of domestic workload, indicating that socialization may play a role in bringing about greater egalitarianism in the domestic sphere in the future.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:09:38Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:b371c6a4-1bdc-4e3e-a375-48810d5185c8
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:09:38Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Department of Sociology, University of Calgary
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:b371c6a4-1bdc-4e3e-a375-48810d5185c82022-06-01T09:33:50ZDo better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the weekJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b371c6a4-1bdc-4e3e-a375-48810d5185c8EnglishSymplectic ElementsDepartment of Sociology, University of Calgary2021Hertog, EKan, M-YShirakawa, KChiba, RThis paper investigates the gendered division of labor in different types of domestic work within married couples in contemporary Japan. We analyze routine housework such as cleaning and cooking, non-routine housework such as home repairs, and care work by using the 2016 Survey of Time Use and Leisure Activities (Japan’s national time diary survey). Our core analysis is done using ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions on total domestic work time, routine housework time, non-routine housework time, and care time. We find that women’s domestic work time dwarfs men’s, and there is some variation by day of the week and education. On weekdays domestic work is almost exclusively the domain of women. On weekends we find evidence of compensatory behaviors for both men and women. Men, especially those with university education, catch up on all types of unpaid work while women, especially those with tertiary education, catch up on unpaid work mostly by spending more time caring for children. Looking at the family balance in sharing domestic labor we find that men increase their time on unpaid work on weekends proportionately more than women do. Consequently, within couples, wives’ share of all types of unpaid work is around 10% smaller on weekends compared to weekdays. In couples where wives have tertiary education, there is an additional reduction by several percentage points in their weekend share of domestic work time compared to weekdays. Our findings suggest that Japanese men’s long work hours contribute to gender inequality in domestic work participation. We also find that university education is associated with more equal sharing of domestic workload, indicating that socialization may play a role in bringing about greater egalitarianism in the domestic sphere in the future.
spellingShingle Hertog, E
Kan, M-Y
Shirakawa, K
Chiba, R
Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title_full Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title_fullStr Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title_full_unstemmed Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title_short Do better-educated couples share domestic work more equitably in Japan? It depends on the day of the week
title_sort do better educated couples share domestic work more equitably in japan it depends on the day of the week
work_keys_str_mv AT hertoge dobettereducatedcouplessharedomesticworkmoreequitablyinjapanitdependsonthedayoftheweek
AT kanmy dobettereducatedcouplessharedomesticworkmoreequitablyinjapanitdependsonthedayoftheweek
AT shirakawak dobettereducatedcouplessharedomesticworkmoreequitablyinjapanitdependsonthedayoftheweek
AT chibar dobettereducatedcouplessharedomesticworkmoreequitablyinjapanitdependsonthedayoftheweek