Time after time: How men and women spend their time and what it means for individual and household poverty and wellbeing
▻https://blogs.worldbank.org/opendata/time-after-time-how-men-and-women-spend-their-time-and-what-it-mean
▻http://blogs.worldbank.org/sites/default/files/users/user1111/Gender+gap%20in%20hours%20allocated%20to%20unpaid%20childcare%20and
Measuring how individuals within a household spend their time is one way to complement efforts to measure poverty and better understand differences in wellbeing between males and females, although lack of data comparable across time and countries makes measurement challenging.
A new policy research working paper, Differences in Time Use: Allocating Time between the Market and the Household, addresses this challenge and provides updated and nuanced results of the 2012 World Development Report on Gender and Development. For a broad sample of countries, it analyzes time use patterns across market work (paid and unpaid work for the production of goods and services sold in the market), unpaid childcare and domestic work, personal care activities, and leisure, social, and study activities over the lifecycle.
▻http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/555711565793045322/Gender-Differences-in-Time-Use-Allocating-Time-between-the-Mark