4.8 Article

The global human day

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2219564120

Keywords

time use; sustainability; global; sociology; economics

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The daily activities of 8 billion people in the world take up 24 hours a day, with most time spent on achieving direct outcomes for human minds and bodies, followed by modifying inhabited environments and the world beyond, and organizing social processes and transportation. The time spent on directly extracting materials and energy from the Earth system and dealing with waste is relatively small, indicating potential for adjusting the allocation of time to these activities.
The daily activities of & AP;8 billion people occupy exactly 24 h per day, placing a strict physical limit on what changes can be achieved in the world. These activities form the basis of human behavior, and because of the global integration of societies and economies, many of these activities interact across national borders. Yet, there is no comprehensive overview of how the finite resource of time is allocated at the global scale. Here, we estimate how all humans spend their time using a generalized, physical outcome-based categorization that facilitates the integration of data from hundreds of diverse data sets. Our compilation shows that most waking hours are spent on activities intended to achieve direct outcomes for human minds and bodies (9.4 h/d), while 3.4 h/d are spent modifying our inhabited environments and the world beyond. The remaining 2.1 h/d are devoted to organizing social processes and transportation. We distinguish activities that vary strongly with GDP per capita, including the time allocated to food provision and infrastructure, vs. those that do not vary consistently, such as meals and transportation time. Globally, the time spent directly extracting materials and energy from the Earth system is small, on the order of 5 min per average human day, while the time directly dealing with waste is on the order of 1 min per day, suggesting a large potential scope to modify the allocation of time to these activities. Our results provide a baseline quantification of the temporal composition of global human life that can be expanded and applied to multiple fields of research.

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