Joel Waldfogel in Slate:
Everyone from economists and sociologists to Oprah knows that women work more than men. Their longer combined hours, at the home and at the office, stop men from taking afternoon naps on the couch and cause fights that end with men spending nights on the couch. And yet according to new study, those longer hours are a myth, because it's just not true that women carry a heavier load.
Three economists, Michael Burda of Humboldt University in Berlin, Daniel Hamermesh of the University of Texas, and Philippe Weil of the Free University of Brussels have analyzed data from surveys in 25 countries that ask people how they spend their time. Some of the countries are rich, like the United States and Germany, some are poor, like Benin and Madagascar, and some are in the middle, like Hungary, Mexico, and Slovenia. The people surveyed were asked to fill in diaries indicating how they spend each segment of their day.
More here.
I... I didn't know there was a myth that men worked less than women.
Oh dear. What other stereotypes am I ignorant of? Is there something I don't know about Asians and public television? Do liberals tend to have a poor sense of direction?
I need to do some research.
Posted by: Cyberpunk Hero | Tuesday, April 17, 2007 at 08:28 PM
Three men came up with this study.
Posted by: Anna | Thursday, April 19, 2007 at 12:06 PM