abstract: 'More than 27\% of the U.S. workforce now reports having an ability to alter their daily starting and ending times of work Yet, provision of flexibility in the timing of work is not keeping pace with demand. Moreover there is much disparity in access to schedule flexibility by workers'' demographic. work, and job characteristics. Probit estimation finds that the probability that a worker has such flexibility is reduced by being female, non-White, and less educated. The likelihood is increased by being self-employed, in college, married, part-time, in certain occupations and industries, and working 50 or more hours per week flexibility is reduced for those working a standard day shift or 40-hour workweek. Workers thus sacrifice either leisure time or income to gain better access to flexibility in the scheduling of work, or they endure the costs of job mobility. Public policy should focus on delivering more flexible schedules to the excluded 73\%.' affiliation: 'Golden, L (Corresponding Author), Penn State Univ Delaware Cty, Commonwealth Coll, Business \& Econ Div, Media, PA 19063 USA. Penn State Univ Delaware Cty, Commonwealth Coll, Business \& Econ Div, Media, PA 19063 USA.' author: Golden, L author_list: - family: Golden given: L da: '2023-09-28' doi: 10.1177/00027640121956700 eissn: 1552-3381 files: [] issn: 0002-7642 journal: AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST keywords-plus: FAMILY; CONSEQUENCES; CONSTRAINTS; PREFERENCES; GENDER; RACE language: English month: MAR number: '7' number-of-cited-references: '53' pages: 1157-1178 papis_id: 4400987d5ba00494e0da5e93b5fd1571 ref: Golden2001flexiblework researcherid-numbers: ', Lonnie/ABF-7000-2020' times-cited: '174' title: Flexible work schedules - Which workers get them? type: Article unique-id: WOS:000168886200006 usage-count-last-180-days: '1' usage-count-since-2013: '32' volume: '44' web-of-science-categories: Psychology, Clinical; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary year: '2001'