Spending Time, Daniel S. Hamermesh
Spending Time, Daniel S. Hamermesh
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Spending Time
The Most Valuable Resource

Author: Daniel S. Hamermesh

Narrator: Erik Bloomquist

Unabridged: 7 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/18/2019


Synopsis

Time is the ultimate scarce resource and thus quintessentially a topic for economics, which studies scarcity. Starting with the observation that time is increasingly valuable given competing demands as we have more things we can buy and do, Spending Time provides engaging insights into how people use their time and what determines their decisions about spending their time.

That our time is limited by the number of hours in a day, days in a year, and years in our lives means that we face constraints and thus choices that involve trade-offs. We sleep, eat, have fun, watch TV, and not least we work. How much we dedicate to each, and why we do so, is intriguing and no one is better placed to shed light on similarities and differences than Daniel S. Hamermesh, the leading authority on time-use. Here he explores how people use their time, including across countries, regions, cultures, class, and gender.

Being stressed for time is central to modern life, and Hamermesh shows who is rushed, and why. With Americans working more than people in France, Germany, the U.K., Japan, and other rich countries, the book also offers a simple but radical proposal for changing Americans' lives and reducing the stress about time.

About Daniel S. Hamermesh

Daniel Hamermesh is Distinguished Scholar, Barnard College, and Professor Emeritus at the University of Texas at Austin and Royal Holloway, University of London. In 2013 he received the Mincer Award for Lifetime Contributions to Labor Economics from the Society of Labor Economists and the IZA Prize in Labor from the Institute for the Study of Labor.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ambrose

A good solid account of how Americans spend their time on working, home production, watching TV, leisure, sleeping, etc. based on elaborated time use data. Many findings of the book may seem obvious but Hamermesh provides good economic explanation for the observed phenomenon. Interesting comparison......more

I enjoyed the dive into labor economics and learning the history of time diaries. What was most interesting to me was the nudge to go beyond the well known correlations. Hamermesh in his comparison of similar subpopulations by country offers an alternative explanation of causality. For example, the......more

Goodreads review by vhnjjj

I found it to be a monotonous read for my taste. The parts seem to be incoherent. I also feel a lot of generalisations were made based on a small set of data and also the data was over analysed. It felt as if the conclusions had already been set and the analysis was biased towards reaching that conc......more

An interesting and engaging book about time and how we spend it. It's full of food for thought and interesting ideas, even if I think that some are not easy to apply. A very good read, recommended. Many thanks to Oxford University Press and Edelweiss. I voluntarily read and reviewed this book, all opin......more