Intrahousehold Bargaining Power and Time Allocation for Multiple Activities

Time allocation
Intrahousehold bargaining power
Multiple discrete-continuous choice modeling
Gender equity
Chile

Cárdenas-Retamal, R., Barrientos Cifuentes, M., Vásquez Lavin, F. and Ponce Oliva, R. (2023). “Intrahousehold Bargaining Power and Time Allocation for Multiple Activities” Latin American Economic Review 32:5, doi: 10.47872/laer.v32.149

Authors
Affiliations

Roberto Cárdenas-Retamal

Departamento de Econoḿıa. Facultad de Ciencias Economicas y Administrativas. Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción. University of Florida, USA.

Manuel Barrientos Ciefuentes

Durham University Business School.

Felipe Vásquez Lavín

Univeridad del Desarrollo

Roberto Ponce Oliva

Universidad del Desarrollo

Published

October 2023

Doi

Abstract

During the last decades, important policies have been implemented to incorporate women into the labor market, reduce persistent gender inequalities, and balance the time allocation between paid and unpaid work. We assess the Chilean case considering couples’ time allocation with an explicit consideration of intrahousehold bargaining power (relative wages and education). The Chilean case is interesting because we use the first urban national survey of time use, which could help understand gender differences in labor participation. We estimate a demand model, specifically a Multiple Discrete-Continuous Extreme Value (MDCEV) model considering six time-consuming activities on weekdays and weekends. In addition, we assess two hypothetical scenarios, namely, a proxy to childcare availability policy and an increase in women’s relative wages. We found that bargaining indicators are related to how individuals allocate their time, particularly the inverse relationship between the time allocated to housework and paid work. Moreover, we found that increasing women’s bargaining power in terms of wages could produce stronger labor force participation increments. Finally, our simulations show that while women can bridge the gap between paid and unpaid work, they continue to spend more time on domestic activities than men.