WP 36 - Women's Preferences or Delineated Policies? The development or part-time work in the Netherlands, Germany and the United Kingdom



Abstract

Within sociological and economic analyses of working time, important questions remain regarding
women’s ability to combine paid and domestic work. While there is a growing body of research in
this area, our knowledge and understanding of the relationship between working, social and private
time, often remains limited, in particular regarding the formation of preferences among women with
different family statuses. In this paper, we consider the phenomenal growth of part-time work and
the emergence of the one-and-a-half earner model in the Netherlands, comparing this to the growth
and high levels of part-time work evident in Germany and the United Kingdom. Despite cross-
national differences in the development of part-time work, many working mothers, in all three
countries, exhibit a preference for part-time work as a second best option for combining paid work
and motherhood. This led to a ‘normalisation’ of part-time work in the Netherlands. We show that
despite a similar gendered employment pattern and a strong “breadwinner” welfare state tradition,
part-time work in Germany and the UK developed under different conditions, making it more
difficult to overcome “marginalisation.



More intriguing information

1. Ahorro y crecimiento: alguna evidencia para la economía argentina, 1970-2004
2. The name is absent
3. Palvelujen vienti ja kansainvälistyminen
4. Testing Gribat´s Law Across Regions. Evidence from Spain.
5. A THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK FOR EVALUATING SOCIAL WELFARE EFFECTS OF NEW AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGY
6. Program Semantics and Classical Logic
7. AN ECONOMIC EVALUATION OF COTTON AND PEANUT RESEARCH IN SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
8. EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES IN TENNESSEE ON WATER USE AND CONTROL - AGRICULTURAL PHASES
9. Does adult education at upper secondary level influence annual wage earnings?
10. The name is absent