Journal
EUROPEAN SOCIETIES
Volume 23, Issue -, Pages S400-S416Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14616696.2020.1828974
Keywords
COVID-19 pandemic; housework; childcare; gender; contribution to income
Categories
Funding
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG -German Research Foundation) under Germany`s Excellence Strategy [EXC-2035/1 -390681379]
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This study investigates whether changes in women's and men's contributions to household income during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany and Italy are associated with changes in unpaid work. The findings suggest that the changes to both income contribution and unpaid activities during the crisis have gendered impacts, with women being more negatively affected than men. The study also indicates that economic disturbances during the pandemic may be linked to gendered changes in unpaid work, potentially driven by changes in bargaining power in both countries.
This article investigates whether changes in women's and men's contributions to household income in Germany and Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic are associated with changes in unpaid work. The current health crisis represents a unique opportunity to explore these topics, because the restrictive measures imposed during the lockdown are likely to have generated an unexpected shock to both domestic work and individual ability to contribute to household income. Using data from two novel datasets collected in Germany and Italy during the pandemic, this article shows that changes to both contribution to household income and unpaid activities during the crisis have been gendered, affecting women more negatively than men. In addition, we suggest that economic disturbances during the pandemic are associated with gendered changes in unpaid work that seem to be driven by changes in bargaining power in both countries. Our results also show some support for enhanced traditionalization of domestic life among German couples during the crisis, as predicted by gender display theories, albeit only regarding childcare.
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