Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.

This paper examines gender differences in paid work over time and illustrates the pitfalls encountered by any comparative research that only considers either labor force participation rates or average working hours. To do so, we analyze harmonized survey data from Europe and the United States from 1...

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Main Authors: Lena Hipp, Kristin Kelley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0322871
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author Lena Hipp
Kristin Kelley
author_facet Lena Hipp
Kristin Kelley
author_sort Lena Hipp
collection DOAJ
description This paper examines gender differences in paid work over time and illustrates the pitfalls encountered by any comparative research that only considers either labor force participation rates or average working hours. To do so, we analyze harmonized survey data from Europe and the United States from 1992 to 2022 (N = 43,283,172) and show that more progress was made in closing gender gaps in labor force participation rates than in working hours. In most countries, women's labor force participation rates increased considerably, but their average working hours decreased, whereas both men's labor force participation rates and average working hours decreased or stagnated (but nonetheless still remained much higher than women's). We show and argue that these countervailing trends in working hours and labor force participation rates make it difficult to paint a coherent picture of cross-national differences in women's and men's paid work and of changes over time. In response, we propose "work volume" as a supplementary or alternative measure for any type of comparative research. Work volume records zero working hours for nonemployed individuals and thus allows straightforward comparisons between women's and men's (or any other groups') involvement in paid work. Using the proposed work volume measure, we show that gender gaps in paid work decreased over time, but that even in 2022, men's involvement in paid work remained considerably higher than women's-with gender gaps being lowest in the Scandinavian and the former Communist countries.
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spelling doaj-art-6212fbe5cd0941d7b1a64b6c3d176bca2025-08-20T01:54:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01205e032287110.1371/journal.pone.0322871Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.Lena HippKristin KelleyThis paper examines gender differences in paid work over time and illustrates the pitfalls encountered by any comparative research that only considers either labor force participation rates or average working hours. To do so, we analyze harmonized survey data from Europe and the United States from 1992 to 2022 (N = 43,283,172) and show that more progress was made in closing gender gaps in labor force participation rates than in working hours. In most countries, women's labor force participation rates increased considerably, but their average working hours decreased, whereas both men's labor force participation rates and average working hours decreased or stagnated (but nonetheless still remained much higher than women's). We show and argue that these countervailing trends in working hours and labor force participation rates make it difficult to paint a coherent picture of cross-national differences in women's and men's paid work and of changes over time. In response, we propose "work volume" as a supplementary or alternative measure for any type of comparative research. Work volume records zero working hours for nonemployed individuals and thus allows straightforward comparisons between women's and men's (or any other groups') involvement in paid work. Using the proposed work volume measure, we show that gender gaps in paid work decreased over time, but that even in 2022, men's involvement in paid work remained considerably higher than women's-with gender gaps being lowest in the Scandinavian and the former Communist countries.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0322871
spellingShingle Lena Hipp
Kristin Kelley
Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
PLoS ONE
title Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
title_full Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
title_fullStr Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
title_short Gender differences in paid work over time: Developments and challenges in comparative research.
title_sort gender differences in paid work over time developments and challenges in comparative research
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0322871
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