wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/e4fa007ad8374f9d49126ffd84e2af17-kowalewska-helen-an/info.yaml

107 lines
3.6 KiB
YAML
Raw Normal View History

2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
abstract: 'In analysing heterosexual couples'' work-family arrangements over time
and space, the comparative social policy literature has settled on the
framework of the `male-breadwinner'' versus the `dual-earner'' family.
Yet, in assuming men in couple-families are (full-time) employed, this
framework overlooks another work-family arrangement, which is the
`female-breadwinner'' couple. Including female-breadwinner couples
matters because of their growing prevalence and, as our analysis shows,
greater economic vulnerability. We perform descriptive and regression
analyses of Luxembourg Income Study microdata to compare household
incomes for female-breadwinner couples and other couple-types across 20
industrialized countries. We then consider how labour earnings and
benefit incomes vary for `pure'' breadwinner couples - comprising one
wage-earner and one inactive/unemployed partner - according to the
gender of the breadwinner. We find that pure female breadwinners have
lower average individual earnings than male breadwinners, even after
controlling for sociodemographic characteristics and occupational and
working-time differences. Furthermore, welfare systems across most
countries are not working hard enough to compensate for the female
breadwinner earnings penalty, including in social-democratic countries.
Once controls are included in our regression models, it never happens
that pure female breadwinners have higher disposable household incomes
than pure male breadwinners. Thus, our study adds to a growing body of
evidence showing that female-breadwinner families sit at the
intersection of multiple disadvantages. In turn, these couples offer
comparative scholars of the welfare state an `acid test'' case study for
how effectively families are protected from social risk. Our results
additionally highlight how cross-national differences in the female
breadwinner income disadvantage do not fit neatly with established
welfare typologies, suggesting that other factors - in particular,
labour market characteristics and the economic cycle - are also at play.'
affiliation: 'Kowalewska, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Oxford, Dept Social Policy
\& Intervent, 32 Wellington Sq, Oxford OX1 2ER, England.
Kowalewska, Helen, Univ Oxford, Oxford, England.
Vitali, Agnese, Univ Trento, Trento, Italy.'
article-number: 0958928720971094
author: Kowalewska, Helen and Vitali, Agnese
author-email: Helen.Kowalewska@spi.ox.ac.uk
author_list:
- family: Kowalewska
given: Helen
- family: Vitali
given: Agnese
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1177/0958928720971094
earlyaccessdate: DEC 2020
eissn: 1461-7269
files: []
issn: 0958-9287
journal: JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN SOCIAL POLICY
keywords: 'female breadwinners; Luxembourg Income Study; gender; breadwinning;
earnings; household employment; male-breadwinner model; work\&\#8211;
family arrangements; women\&\#8217; s employment'
keywords-plus: 'WORK; GENDER; MODEL; LABOR; POLICIES; WOMEN; MOTHERHOOD; RECESSION;
PATTERNS; COUPLES'
language: English
month: MAY
number: '2'
number-of-cited-references: '44'
orcid-numbers: Vitali, Agnese/0000-0003-0029-9447
pages: 125-142
papis_id: 485a410e9ede1e65381688fa25abb48a
ref: Kowalewska2021breadwinningbreadlin
times-cited: '16'
title: Breadwinning or on the breadline? Female breadwinners' economic characteristics
across 20 welfare states
2023-10-01 08:15:07 +00:00
type: article
2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
unique-id: WOS:000599245200001
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '8'
volume: '31'
web-of-science-categories: Public Administration; Social Issues
year: '2021'