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Time and income poverty. The needed link

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Time and income poverty. The needed link Araceli Dami n El Colegio de M xico Maximum length of the working journey At the end of the XIX century (1886) there were ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Time and income poverty. The needed link


1
Time and income poverty. The needed link
  • Araceli Damián
  • El Colegio de México

2
Maximum length of the working journey
  • At the end of the XIX century (1886) there were
    the first labour strikes (US) that claimed for a
    8 hours working day
  • Nowadays in many countries this human right is
    not fulfilled. In China, for example, there is
    some evidence that millions of workers in the
    export manufacture work between 12 to 16 hours
    per day, with only one day per month to rest

3
Time as a resource of satisfaction of needs
  • Time is money (Committee to evaluate the poverty
    measurement method in the US in 1995, 1977)
  • Poverty is often defined as a lack of money
    resources. Income is usually defined as command
    over resources.. Command over resources should
    for comparability at least include a measure of
    home production which in turn depends on
    opportunity and time (Piachaud)
  • Time and household members abilities are the
    resources that households can use for paid
    activities and other tasks (quehaceres) (Oscar
    Altimir, ECLAC)
  • The lack of free time after accounting for
    productive and reproductive activities is an
    indicator of the satisfaction of the autonomy
    need (Doyal and Gough)

4
Time as a resource
  • Recreation activities (to have a night out once a
    week), vacations (a week of vacations in the last
    12 months), to have save time household
    appliances (laundry and dryer machines). All
    these indicators are used to measure deprivation
    (Townsend/Gordon)
  • Time for education, leisure, or domestic chores
    is seen as a restriction for labour participation
    by neoclassic economics (Becker, Bryant,
    Vickery, Haveman)
  • Time as a well-being resource and a key element
    for the human flourishing. It is also a
    satisfactor of human needs (Boltvinik).

5
An ideal household in capitalism
  • Al members of the household are paid employees.
    All meals are consumed in restaurants, and all
    housework is performed by a paid domestic worker
    or by private companies. The time devoted to
    housework is equal to 0 (or almost 0), and time
    is only needed for consumption and paid work.
  • Problems in the model time is needed to take
    care of children. Therefore family work is
    inevitable.
  • Household is truly a small factory it combines
    capital goods, row materials and labour to clean,
    feed, procreate and otherwise produce useful
    commodities (Becker)

6
PL 2 US dls per day per person
Ana and her son (y 2 USDlls p/p)
Juan, Inés and their son (y 2 USDlls p/p)
7
Time for human flourishing
  • Capabilities and human needs, developed in the
    past, are found, as fairies godmothers, in their
    objective form, at the head of the cod (Giörgy
    Markus) Adults require time to help children to
    acquire the historical accumulative knowledge and
    capabilities.
  • Time is needed to fulfil all human needs to
    achieve self-realisation (Abraham Maslow).
    Hierarchy of human needs 1) physiologic needs,
    2) security needs 3) affection and love needs
    4) self-respect needs 5) self-realization

8
Time poverty methodologies
  • US committees to evaluate the official poverty
    measurement methodology
  • Vickery (1977) Generalised poverty index (Becker)
    (PL)
  • Haveman (1977) Household capacity to earn income
    (PL)
  • Citro and Michel (1995) time is money (it is
    not clear how to measure the difference in the
    availability of time in different households)
  • UK budget standards
  • Bradshaw (ed., 1993) one parent households need
    to be compensated for the lack of free time and
    for the smaller amount of potential adult time
    devoted to children, compared with two parents
    household (PL)
  • Mexico
  • Boltvinik (1993) IPMM Excess of working time
    index (EWI)

9
Vickery (poverty standard)
  • If the minimum nonpoor level of consumption
    requires both money and household production,
    then the official poverty standards do not
    correctly measure household needs
  • Identify those households that appear to have
    insufficient resources (time and income) to
    maintain the physical and mental well-being of
    their members.

10
Graph 1. Time-income threshold (Vickery)
11
Time requirements (Vickery)
12
Some problems of the Vickery model
  • She has a minimalist approach on income and time
  • There are some households that have an excess of

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