Title: Allocating%20Time:%20Individuals
1Allocating TimeIndividuals Technologies and
Household Technology
- Robert A. Pollak
- Washington University
- May 27, 2008
2- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
2
3New Home Economics (NHE)
- Reid (1934) Economics of Household Production
- Mincer (1963) Grunfeld volume
- Market Prices, Opportunity Costs, and Income
Effects - Becker (EJ, 1965)
- A Theory of the Allocation of Time
- Becker (1981, 1991)
- A Treatise on the Family
3
4Time Use Categories
- Two time uses in neoclassical economics
- leisure
- market work (labor)
- Three time uses in the NHE
- leisure
- market work (labor)
- household production
-
4
5Trends in Leisure
- Shore (1991) Overworked American
- Hochschild (1997) Time Bind
- Hamermesh (REStat, 2007)
- Aguiar and Hurst (QJE, 2007)
- Ramey and Francis (NBER, 2006)
5
6Process Preferences
- Preferences for Market Work, Nonmarket Work, and
Leisure - Is household work like market work?
- Or is it like leisure?
- Labor economists should reject this dichotomy a
continuum - Compensating and noncompensating wage
differentials - Danger and/or unpleasantness
- Equalizing differences
- Adam Smith (1776) Sherwin Rosen (Hndbk, 1986)
- Pecuniary and nonpecuniary returns
6
7Household vs. Family
- I will not emphasize this distinction
- Who lives with whom is endogenous
- Terminology is sloppy
- Household production
- Traditional nuclear family
- Stem family
7
8Two Crucial Distinctions between Becker (1965)
and Becker (1981)
- single-person households vs.
- multiple-person households
- one-period models vs.
- multi-period models
8
9Make this a 2 x 2 table 2 or more
- Periods
- Persons 1 2 3 or
more -
- 1
-
- 2
- 3 or
- more
Becker (1965)
Becker (1981)
9
10Toward a New New Home Economics Primitives in
the New NHE
- 1. Preferences
- e.g., individuals' utility functions
- 2. Technology
- Individuals technologies and
- household technology
- production functions
- 3. Household governance structure
- e.g., altruist model Nash bargaining
-
10
11Time Use in Minnesota Macro
- Benhabib, Rogerson and Wright (JPE, 1991)
- Greenwood and Hercowitz (JPE, 1991)
- McGrattan, Rogerson, and Wright (IER, 1997)
- Greenwood, Seshadri and Yorukoglu (REStat, 2005)
Engines of Liberation - Gronau (NBER, 2006)
11
12New Time Use Data
- American Time Use Survey (ATUS)
- Hamermesh, Franzis, and Stewart (JEP, 2005)
- Australian Time Use data
- UK Time Use Survey (UKTUS)
- German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP)
- Danish Time Use Survey (DTUS) and
- Danish Household Expenditure Survey (DHES)
(Browning and Gørtz, 2006) - Consumption and Activities Mail Survey (CAMS)
- Hurd and Rohwedder
12
13Empirical Time Use Research
- Gronau (1986, 1997, 2006)
- Juster and Stafford (JEL, 1991)
- Robinson and Godbey (1997) Time For Life
- Gershuny (2000) Changing Times
- Presser (2003) Working in a 24/7 Economy
- Folbre and Bittman (2004) Family Time
- Jacobs and Gerson (2004) The Time Divide
- Gronau and Hamermesh (Rev IW, 2006)
- Bianchi, Robinson, and Milkie (2006) Changing
Rhythms of American Family Life
13
14- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
14
15The New Home Economics and Household Production
- Becker (EJ, 1965)
- "A Theory of the Allocation of Time
- Becker wrote households are "assumed to combine
time and market goods to produce more basic
commodities that directly enter their utility
functions. - Michael and Becker (Swedish J of Ec, 1973)
- Becker (1981, 1991) A Treatise on the Family
- Becker (1981, 1991) differs from Becker (1965)
and from Michael and Becker (1973)
15
16Becker (E.J.,1965) Assumptions
- commodities (outputs) measurable
- commodity (shadow) prices
- fewer commodities than market goods
- production functions (no joint production)
- constant returns to scale
- single person households
- no human capital
-
16
17Pollak and Wachter (JPE, 1975)
- critique of Becker (E.J., 1965)
- are the commodities (outputs) measurable?
- process preferences
- people care how they spend their time
- cooking vs cleaning
- process preferences imply joint production
- with joint production, commodity shadow prices
depend on preferences - (as well as goods prices and technology)
- single person households
- no human capital
17
18Becker (1981, 1991) Assumptions
- multiperson household
- specialization and division of labor
- unitary model of household decision making
- households have utility functions
- spouses time inputs perfect substitutes in
production - human capital
- one household commodity (sometimes)
18
19Crucial Changes
- Single-person household to multiple-person
household Specialization and Division of Labor - One-period model to multi-period model
- Human capital in market production
- Human capital in household production
- But still no physical capital in household
production
19
20- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
20
21When Does Theory Require Individuals
Technologies?
- 1. Marriage market
- Compare well-being when single to well-being in
particular marriage - 2. Divorce
- Compare well-being in current marriage to
well-being if divorced - 3. Bargaining within marriage
- Divorce as threat point in some models
- Divorce as outside option in some models
21
22Specifying Household Technology The Usual
Suspects
- Joint production
- Economies of scale
- Spouses' time perfect substitutes
- Human capital
- Market (i.e. purchased) inputs,
- including hired labor
- Time or labor means household time or household
labor, not hired labor - Physical capital
22
23The Meaning of Technology
- Book of blueprints vs. knowledge in the mind of
chief engineer - Tacit knowledge -- Michael Polanyi
- Knowing how vs. knowing that -- Gilbert Ryle
- Recipes from cookbook vs. mind of the cook
- Technology as production set vs.
- technology as production function
- Process benefits imply joint production
- Technology transfer and learning by doing
23
24Production Functions for Single-person
Households
- For a single-person household, denote the
household production function for the commodity z
by - z f(t,y)
- where t denotes the input of household time (or
labor) into its production and y the vector of
market inputs. - This assumes no joint production and, hence, no
process preferences. - Assumption No output without individuals time
input - f (0,y)0
24
25Production Functions for Multiple-person
Households
- z gt1,t2,y, where t1 and t2 denote the
spouses' time inputs into the production of z. - Denote the individual production functions of
the spouses by - f1(t1,y1) and f2(t2,y2)
- Household production with specialization
- gt1,0,y
- g0, t2,y
25
26Revelation Assumption
- Specialized household production reveals
individuals production functions - gt1,0,y f1(t1, y)
- g0, t2,y f2(t2, y)
- That is, we can infer individuals production
functions from the household production function.
- With specialization, this is what we would
observe.
26
27Interpretations of Individuals Production
Functions
- 1. Before household formation
- marriage or cohabitation
- immaculate conception of
- household technology
- 2. After household dissolution divorce
- actual divorce
- household bargaining
- threat point or outside option
- 3. After death of spouse
27
28Beckers Perfect Substitutes Assumption
- Becker (sometimes) assumes that spouses time
inputs are perfect substitutes - gt1,t2 Gt1at2
- gt1,t2 y Gt1at2, y
28
29Implications of Revelation Assumption and
Beckers Perfect Substitutes Assumption
- The revelation assumption and Becker's perfect
substitutes assumption imply that the
individuals' production functions are identical
to each other except for an "efficiency factor." - Proof Perfect substitutes implies that the
household production function is of the form - g t1,t2 y Gt1at2, y
- so
- g t1,0, y Gt1,, y f1(t1, y)
- g 0,t2 y Gat2, y f2(a t2 , y)
- where a converts the time input of spouse 2 into
units comparable to the time input of spouse 1.
Thus, (t1 at2) is the total time input into the
production of the focal commodity, measured in
"efficiency units."
29
30Question
- When can we infer household production function
from individuals production functions? - To do so requires a new assumption Additivity
30
31Additive Household Production Functions No
Market Inputs
- Suppose output is produced by labor (time) alone
no market inputs - I say a household production function is
additive if - gt1,t2 f1(t1) f2(t2)
- Additivity means there are no positive or
negative interactions (externalities spillovers)
associated with side-by-side production.
31
32Additive Household Production Functions Market
Inputs
- I say that the household production function is
"additive" if the household output from the input
vector (t1,t2,y) is equal to the maximum of the
sum of the outputs they would realize by
producing "side by side." - gt1, t2, y max f1(t1,y1) f2(t2,y2)
- subject to y1 y2 y.
- This assumes that market inputs are household
private goods and are allocated to maximize total
output.
32
33Additivity
- Additivity is a more plausible assumption than
perfect substitutes, in part because it does not
require that the spouses' production functions be
identical except for an efficiency factor. -
33
34When are Additivity and Perfect Substitutes
Compatible? - 1
- When time is the only input, combining additivity
and perfect substitues implies - gt1,t2 Gt1 at2 f1(t1) f2(t2).
- Making use of the assumption that a time input of
0 implies 0 output, we obtain - Gt1 f1(t1)
- Gat2 f2(t2).
- so
- Gt1 at2 Gt1 Gat2.
- This is Cauchy's functional equation.
34
35Additivity and Perfect Substitutes - 2
- Differentiating with respect to t1 we obtain
- G't1 at2 Gt1
- which implies that the functions g is linear.
- Assuming that a time input of 0 implies an output
of 0 yields - Gt ct
- Gt1 at2 c(t1 at2).
- f1 (t1) ct1
- f2 ( t2 ) c a t2
35
36Additivity and Perfect Substitutes - 3
- When time is the only input, additivity and
perfect substitutes are compatible if and only if
the production functions are linear. - With nonlabor inputs, additivity and perfect
substitutes are compatible if the production
functions are homogeneous of degree one and
differ only by an efficiency factor.
37Why Linear Technology is Unappealing
- Highly restrictive
- But it is implied by
- output produced by time alone,
- household's technology is additive, and
- time inputs are perfect substitutes.
- The first two assumptions are consistent with
fatigue or boredom causing productivity to
decline as time inputs increase. Combining them
with the perfect substitutes assumption rules
this out.
37
38Additivity and Perfect Substitutes
- Additivity and perfect substitutes imply
- G2t,2y 2Gt,y.
- PROOF Gt1 at2,y Gt1 ,y1 Gat2,.y2,
- where y is allocated to maximize output.
- Let t2 t1 / a so
- Gt1 at2,y Gt1 t1,y Gt1,y1
Gt1,.y2, - maximizing output implies y1 y2 y/2.
Hence - Gt1 t1,y G2t1,y 2Gt1,y/2
- Define t t1 and y y/2. Then
- G2t,2y 2Gt,y.
39Theorem
- If Gt,y is concave and
- G2t,2y 2Gt,y, then
- G(?t,?y) ?G(t,y) for all ? gt 0.
- That is, if the household production function is
concave, the spouses time inputs are perfect
substitutes, additivity and essentiallity hold,
then the household production function is
homogeneous of degree 1. - Massimo Marinacci and Luigi Montrucchio proved
this
40Decreasing Returns to Scale
- If the individuals' production functions exhibit
decreasing returns to scale (e.g., because
individuals become less productive as they become
tired or bored), then Becker's specialization
conclusion need not hold. - If the household production function is
additive, then efficiency is compatible with
side-by-side production and does not imply
specialization.
40
41Example
- Suppose spouses' production functions are of the
form - f1(t1) A1 (t1)s1 and f2 (t2) A2
(t2)s2 - where the parameters ?1 and ?2 indicate the
returns to scale - properties of the individuals technologies.
Imposing additivity and the assumption that the
spouses' time inputs are perfect substitutes
implies - ?1 ?2 1.
- That is, imposing Becker's perfect substitutes
assumption rules out decreasing returns to scale
and implies that both spouses' production
functions collapse to the constant returns to
scale case, and - gt1, t2 A1 t 1A2 t2
41
42- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
42
43Becker on Specialization and the Division of
Labor - 1
- "Theorem 2.1 If all members of an efficient
household have different comparative advantages,
no more than one member would allocate time to
both the market and household sectors. Everyone
with a greater comparative advantage in the
market than this member's would specialize
completely in the market, and everyone with a
greater comparative advantage in the household
would specialize completely there."
43
44Becker on Specialization and the Division of
Labor - 2
- "Theorem 2.3. At most one member of an efficient
household would invest in both market and
household capital and would allocate time to both
sectors."
44
45Where do Becker's Specialization Results Come
from?
- "Pure economics has a remarkable way of producing
rabbits out of a hat -- apparently a priori
propositions which apparently refer to reality.
It is fascinating to try to discover how the
rabbits got in for those of us who do not
believe in magic must be convinced that they got
in somehow." J. R. Hicks, Value and Capital,
1938
45
46Beckers Theorems
- Becker's statements of the theorems do not
include all of the assumptions. Becker
explicitly states some additional assumptions in
the nearby text, but other assumptions are left
unstated. In Pollak (REHO, 2003) I argue that
this style -- conclusions presented as "theorems"
without explicit statements of their hypotheses
-- is vintage Becker. - Bergstrom (JPE 1989), A Fresh Look at the Rotten
Kid Theorem-and Other Household Mysteries
46
47General Points about Beckers Theorems
- The theorems are not restricted to married couple
households. - Efficiency in household production is explicitly
assumed. - Human capital -- market human capital and
household human capital -- appear to play a
central role.
47
48Three Specific Points - 1
- Both theorems assume that there are only two
"sectors"-- home and market. - This assumption is crucial for Becker's
conclusion about the efficiency of wives
specializing in the home and husbands in the
market. Lundberg (LE, 2005) - If there are m household commodities then, for
households in which both husbands and wives
participate in the market, Becker's reasoning
implies that husbands specialize in the
production of m of these home-produced
commodities and the wives in the production of
the remaining m-m commodities.
48
49Three Specific Points - 2
- The assumption of constant or increasing returns
to scale rules out the possibility that an
individual who devotes more time to an activity
becomes less productive (e.g., as a result of
fatigue or boredom). If both spouses experience
reduced productivity due to fatigue or boredom
and the household technology is additive, then
efficiency may call for side-by-side production
rather than specialization.
49
50Three Specific Points III
- Sometimes Becker assumes that the time inputs of
husbands and wives are "perfect substitutes."
(But not in the statement of these two theorems.)
50
51- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
51
52The Meaning of Specialization
- Specialization by sector
- (home vs. market)
- Specialization by activity
- (e.g., cooking vs. cleaning)
- What is an activity?
- cooking?
- grilling?
- grilling fish?
52
53Role of Unstated Special Assumptions
- 1. how many commodities?
- activities?
- Lundberg (LE, 2005)
- 2. suppose you become tired or bored
- implications for technology
- decreasing returns to scale
- 3. suppose you become tired or bored
- implications for preferences
- process preferences
- implications for specialization
- depend on household governance structure
53
54Beckers Explanation of Specialization
- Becker emphasizes role of family specific,
relationship specific, sector specific, or
activity specific human capital in household
production - Household human capital accumulates during
marriage. - Household human capital investments before
marriage these cannot be family specific - gender as coordinating mechanism
- Family specific vs. general (household) human
capital - Evidence for household human capital
54
55Alternative Explanations of Specialization
- Technology (perfect substitutes)
- Human Capital
- Market human capital
- Household human capital
- Sector specific or activity specific
- Family specific
- Process Gender Norms (Doing Gender)
- Preferences
- Economics of Scope
- Economics of Scale
- Transaction Costs coordination and monitoring
55
56- Introduction
- Background
- Individuals' Technologies and Household
Technology - Becker's Specialization Claims
- Critique of Specialization Claims
- Conclusion
56
57Conclusion
- What do we mean by specialization?
- sector vs. activity
- Becker's specialization claims depend on special
and implausible assumptions about technology
and tastes fatigue and boredom - Why specialization?
- Is it perfect substitutes and human capital?
- If it is human capital, is it household rather
than market human capital? -
57
58Relationship between Individuals' and Household
Technologies
- Household formation
- marriage or cohabitation
- immaculate conception of household
technology - Household dissolution
- actual divorce
- household bargaining
- threat point or outside option
- Death of spouse
- Disability of spouse
58
59Additivity and Perfect Substitutes
- Additivity
- gt1 , t2 f1(t1 ) f2 (t2 )
- Perfect substitutes
- gt1 , t2 Gt1 a t2
59
60Implications of Additivity and Perfect Substitutes
- gt1 , t2 f1(t1 ) f2(t2 )
- and
- gt1 , t2 Gt1 a t2
- implies
- gt1 , t2 ct1 c a t2
-
-
60
61Alternative Explanations of Specialization
- Technology (perfect substitutes)
- Human Capital
- household human capital
- market human capital
- Gender Norms (Doing Gender)
- Economics of Scope
- Transaction Costs
- coordination
- monitoring
61