Abstract
While women were already doing most of the world’s unpaid care work prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, emerging research suggests that the crisis and its subsequent shutdown response have resulted in a dramatic increase in this burden. It is likely that the negative impacts for women and families will last for years without proactive interventions. What we commonly refer to as “the economy” would not function without the (often unrecognized) foundation of work provided by the “care economy”: the reproduction of everyday life through cooking, raising children, and so forth. The paid economy has slowed not only because people are physically not allowed into workplaces, but also because many families currently need to raise and educate their children without institutional support, which is reducing remunerated working hours and increasing stress. It has long been recognized that gross domestic product ignores the care economy and heterodox economists have promoted alternative economic systems that could value care work and facilitate a fairer sharing of domestic labor while promoting environmental and economic sustainability. This policy brief builds on recent work on the care economy to explore implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and opportunities for addressing the burden of unpaid care work.
Keywords
Related Publications
The pandemic paradox: The consequences of COVID‐19 on domestic violence
COVID-19 (the new strain of coronavirus) has been declared a global pandemic. Measures announced over recent weeks to tackle it have seen people's day-to-day life drastically al...
Age-dependent effects in the transmission and control of COVID-19 epidemics
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown a markedly low proportion of cases among children<sup>1-4</sup>. Age disparities in observed cases could be explained by children having lower su...
Systematic review of COVID‐19 in children shows milder cases and a better prognosis than adults
Abstract Aim The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) pandemic has affected hundreds of thousands of people. Data on symptoms and prognosis in children are rare. Methods A system...
A Treatise on the Family
Preface to the Enlarged Edition Introduction 1. Single-Person Households 2. Division of Labor in Households and Families Supplement: Human Capital, Effort, and the Sexual Divisi...
Male and Female: Job versus Gender Models in the Sociology of Work
Work has been seen as the central social process that links individuals to industrial society and to each other. Although work issues are considered universal, the actual study ...
Publication Info
- Year
- 2020
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 16
- Issue
- 1
- Pages
- 67-73
- Citations
- 1022
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1080/15487733.2020.1776561