Description |
1 online resource (xii, 185 pages) |
Series |
International series on consumer science |
|
International series on consumer science.
|
Contents |
Nonunitary Models of Household Behavior: A Survey of the Literature / Olivier Donni and Pierre-André Chiappori -- Independent Individual Decision-Makers in Household Models and the New Home Economics / Shoshana Grossbard -- Household Time Use, Inequality and Taxation / Patricia Apps and Ray Rees -- Revealed Preference Tests for Collective Household Behavior / Laurens Cherchye, Bram De Rock, Frederic Vermeulen, and Ewout Verriest -- Collective Labor Supply of Native Dutch and Immigrant Households in the Netherlands / Chris van Klaveren, Bernard van Praag, and Henriette Maassen van den Brink -- The Effects of Marriage on Couples' Allocation of Time Between Market and Nonmarket Hours / Nicolas Moreau and Abdel Rahmen El Lahga -- Do Dads Matter? Or Is It Just Their Money that Matters? Unpicking the Effects of Separation on Educational Outcomes / Ian Walker and Yu Zhu -- Measuring the Transmission of Economic Shocks Among the Household Members of the Same Extended Family / Ernesto Villanueva |
Summary |
For decades, the traditional model of household economic behavior assumed a nuclear family and a standardized structure. But recent seismic shifts in family composition (e.g., childless, cohabiting, blended) and in the ways family members shop, save, and work are bringing challenges to the unitary model and opening up new avenues for study. In Household Economic Behaviors, a distinguished panel of researchers offers theoretical analysis and empirical findings that reflect the complex realities of contemporary family decision-making. Non-unitary alternatives featured include collective/cooperative, strategic/bargaining, and independent individual models. A variety of pertinent situations and comparative studies comes under discussion, such as intra-household bargaining, monetary versus non-monetary transfers within households, decision-making differences between immigrant and native families, and the impact of economic downturns. Chapter authors add to a diversifying knowledge base as they: · Introduce and clarify non-unitary models of household behavior, including collective and strategic, with their policy implications. · Discuss alternative independent individual models of the household. · Review the current literature on household time use, inequality, and taxation. · Examine revealed preference tests for collective household behavior. · Compare collective labor supply of natives and immigrants. · Explore the effects of marriage on couples' allocation of time. · Tackle the controversial question, "Do fathers matter--or just their money?" · Consider the transmission of economic shocks among family members. The innovative and timely perspectives in Household Economic Behaviors are especially instructive for researchers studying the economics of the family and social policy, as well as professors and students in family relations |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
English |
Subject |
Home economics -- Decision making
|
|
Home economics -- Accounting.
|
|
Accounting.
|
|
Decision making.
|
|
Economics.
|
|
Accounting
|
|
Decision Making
|
|
Economics
|
|
Family Characteristics -- economics
|
|
accounting.
|
|
decision making.
|
|
economics.
|
|
FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS -- General.
|
|
HOUSE & HOME -- Reference.
|
|
Economics
|
|
Decision making
|
|
Accounting
|
|
Home economics -- Accounting
|
|
Home economics -- Decision making
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Molina, José Alberto
|
ISBN |
9781441994318 |
|
1441994319 |
|
9786613350695 |
|
6613350699 |
|