Unpaid Work Valuation
Unpaid work valuation assigns a monetary value to the household and care work — cooking, cleaning, childcare, eldercare — that falls outside the market and is therefore excluded from gross domestic product. By multiplying measured hours of unpaid work by an imputed wage, it makes the economic contribution of this overwhelmingly female-performed labor visible, typically reported in national-accounts satellite accounts as recommended by the System of National Accounts.
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Sources
- European Commission, IMF, OECD, United Nations, & World Bank (2009). System of National Accounts 2008. United Nations. ISBN: 9789211615227
- Folbre, N. (2006). Measuring care: Gender, empowerment, and the care economy. Journal of Human Development, 7(2), 183–199. DOI: 10.1080/14649880600768512 ↗
- United Nations Statistics Division (2005). Guide to Producing Statistics on Time Use: Measuring Paid and Unpaid Work. United Nations. ISBN: 9789211614718
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Valuation of Unpaid Household and Care Work. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/gender-studies/unpaid-work-valuation
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- Gender Gap DecompositionGender Studies↔ compare
- Intersectionality AnalysisGender Studies↔ compare
- Time-Use AnalysisGender Studies↔ compare