The Social Economics of Work Time: Introduction
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Review of Social Economy
- Vol. 56 (4) , 411-424
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00346769800000042
Abstract
How do social economists conceptualize and analyze time, particularly time spent in paid employment? In this symposium regarding this quite “timely”" issue, it is evident that social economics views work time as something more than its presentation in neoclassical economics. For neoclassical economists, time is a scarce resource that, when commodified as labor, serves as a factor of production and means to the end of consumption for optimizing firms, individuals, and families. It is also more than the radical political economics understanding of time as the yardstick measuring the value created by labor. Instead, time spent on the job is all at once a source of income, personal identity, and relative status within society, the workplace and household, and a constraint on individuals' ability to pursue self-directed activities and social reproduction. Work time is determined within a complex web of evolving culture and social relations, as well as traditionally conceived market, technological, and macroeconomic forces and institutions such as collective bargaining and government policy.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Time BindWorkingUSA, 1997
- Constraints on the Desired Hours of Work of British MenThe Economic Journal, 1997
- Working Longer Hours: Pressure from the Boss or Pressure from the Marketers?Review of Social Economy, 1997
- MEGATRENDS IN WORKING TIME Vittorio Di Martino International Labour Organization, GenevaJournal of European Social Policy, 1995
- Assessing the Time‐Squeeze Hypothesis: Hours Worked in the United States, 1969–89Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, 1994
- Trends in Market Work Behavior of Women Since 1940ILR Review, 1993
- Changes in Work Hours of Male Employees, 1940-1988ILR Review, 1993
- Leisure, Insecurity and Union Policy in Britain: A Critical Extension of Bienefeld's Theory of Hours RoundsBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 1987
- Capitalism and the History of Worktime ThoughtBritish Journal of Sociology, 1986
- TIME, WORK-DISCIPLINE, AND INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISMPast & Present, 1967