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Relational work in the family: the gendered microfoundation of parents' economic decisions

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  • Rao, Aliya

Abstract

How do parents decide what goods, experiences, and activities they can afford for their children during times of economic insecurity? This article draws on 72 in-depth interviews with U.S. professional middle-class families in which one parent is unemployed. Extending the concept of relational work, this study illuminates how the microfoundation of economic decisions is gendered. Families where fathers are unemployed take the approach of relational preservation: they seek to maintain a high threshold of expenditures on children and view curtailing child-related spending as a threat to their class status. These families see reducing expenditures on children as a parental, and especially paternal, failure. Families where mothers are unemployed take an approach of relational downscaling, lowering the threshold for essential expenditures on children. These families are reluctant to spend less on children’s education, but they do not view decreasing spending on other items, such as consumer goods, as threatening their class status. Gendering relational work reveals how inequalities within families are reproduced through meaning-making around expenditures on children, and it clarifies a key source of variation in parental economic decision-making.

Suggested Citation

  • Rao, Aliya, 2022. "Relational work in the family: the gendered microfoundation of parents' economic decisions," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 116883, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
  • Handle: RePEc:ehl:lserod:116883
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    File URL: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/116883/
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rebecca Glauber, 2018. "Trends in the Motherhood Wage Penalty and Fatherhood Wage Premium for Low, Middle, and High Earners," Demography, Springer;Population Association of America (PAA), vol. 55(5), pages 1663-1680, October.
    2. Sabino Kornrich & Frank Furstenberg, 2013. "Investing in Children: Changes in Parental Spending on Children, 1972–2007," Demography, Springer;Population Association of America (PAA), vol. 50(1), pages 1-23, February.
    3. Michelle F. Weinberger & Jane R. Zavisca & Jennifer M. Silva, 2017. "Consuming for an Imagined Future: Middle-Class Consumer Lifestyle and Exploratory Experiences in the Transition to Adulthood," Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Consumer Research Inc., vol. 44(2), pages 332-360.
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    economic sociology; parenting; professional middle-class; qualitative research; relational work; unemployment;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • N0 - Economic History - - General

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