Abstract
PurposeAlthough essential to social welfare, unpaid domestic and care work is an increasingly scarce resource in modern societies. Despite the growing need, many households refrain from outsourcing their domestic chores to the market. Simultaneously, the household service sector is mostly characterised by low-qualification, informal jobs lacking quality and professional standards. Drawing on transaction cost theory, the present study aims to examine how trust problems deriving from the quality and professionalisation of domestic services can be overcome by also exploring the role of state subsidies in this context.Design/methodology/approachA factorial survey experiment in Germany (N = 4024) causally explores the effect of state-subsidised service vouchers, quality signals and professionalisation on preferences and willingness-to-pay for domestic services. The data were analysed using multilevel modelling techniques.FindingsHypotheses are mostly confirmed: strong quality signals help overcome trust problems, thus facilitating the demand for household services. Further, service vouchers can generate better pay for domestic workers while simultaneously reducing the costs for households.Research limitations/implicationsThe relevance of professionalisation and quality of service as important determinants of domestic service demand is revealed. However, the experimental survey design involves hypothetical scenarios.Originality/valueThe analysis offers insights into how to stimulate demand for household services and increase formal employment in a sector currently largely characterised by informal arrangements. It further shows how social policies can help secure quality and foster professionalisation by shifting paid domestic work from the informal to the formal economy.
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Sociology and Political Science
Reference55 articles.
1. Choice-Experimente und die Messung von Handlungsentscheidungen in der Soziologie;KZfSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie,2011
2. The changing boundary between home and market: australian trends in outsourcing domestic labour;Work, Employment and Society,1999
3. Bock, G. and Duden, B. (2007–1980), “Labor of love - love as labor: on the genesis of housework in capitalism”, Rev. ed., in Altbach, E.H. (Ed.), From Feminism to Liberation, Transaction, NB, pp. 153-190.
4. Creating low skilled jobs by subsidizing market-contracted household work;Applied Economics,2006
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献