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Maria Stanfors. Photo.

Maria Stanfors

Professor

Maria Stanfors. Photo.

Time Alone or Together? Trends and Trade-offs Among Dual-Earner Couples, Sweden 1990–2010

Author

  • Maria Stanfors
  • Jeffrey Neilson

Summary, in English

In recent decades, the dual-earner couple has become increasingly normative, potentially reducing the time couples and families spend together. The authors investigated how coupled individuals allocated time together, alone, with children, and as a family, exploring changes between 1990 and 2010 in Sweden using three waves of the Swedish Time Use Survey (N = 9,544). Ordinary least squares and decomposition analyses find a trend toward time together over time alone, with childless couples spending similar time together and parents increasing family time. The shift toward family time evolved differently for men and women, indicating gender convergence in private and public spheres, but at higher costs of time alone for women. Change is behavioral and general, applying quite equally across gender and educational groups. There are educational gradients concerning time with children and certain qualitative aspects of time together, indicating that dual-earner society may be family friendly, but not equally for all.

Department/s

  • Centre for Economic Demography
  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2018

Language

English

Pages

80-98

Publication/Series

Journal of Marriage and Family

Volume

80

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Economic History

Keywords

  • gender
  • interaction
  • parenthood
  • time diary methods
  • time use

Status

Published

Project

  • It's about time! Gender, parenthood and changing time use patterns, 1990-2010

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1741-3737