MORE ON THE CONCEPT OF CARE (II)
developed the second day of the Seminar on the Economics of Care International. This event showcased the results of the National Survey on Time Use (2007) which is very important to understand the concept of care, the care economy and the implications in Ecuador, and discrete roles assigned to men and women. I share with you some facts:
■ The overall workload indicator is part of the motions for the Centre for Gender indicators commissioned by the "X Regional Conference on Women in Latin America and the Caribbean, "in the" Quito Consensus "of August 9, 2007 to ECLAC. There are some ways to present this flag, it can do for the total weekly working hours of3 all men and women of the country or can take the form of average hours of work, INEC research chose the second option.
■ This indicator of overall workload serves to highlight the difference of it between men and women and highlight the impact of unpaid work in the lives of women.
■ Indigenous women work an average of 23 hours per week than Indian men. In the mixed population of women work 15 hours each week than men.
■ For marital status, cohabiting women (union free and married) work longer than unmarried women especially in rural households of married women work 28 hours more than men, the national average: 19 hours more per week than men.
■ The work paid the difference is less, on average, men work 8 hours each week than women, while the difference unpaid national average is 23 hours working women. These data tell us that women remain in charge "natural" care tasks and also carrying out unpaid work, yet remarkably, decreases the amount of time available for themselves.
source: The time for them and for them. Indicators from the National Survey of Time Use _ 2007. CONAMU, INEC.
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