[en] We combine exogenous variation in temperature at the county-day level in the U.S. with daily time use data to examine the effect of temperature on joint time use. We show that low temperatures reduce time spent with friends but increase time spent with family. Conversely, high temperatures increase time alone but reduce time with family. We also provide evidence of the effect of temperature on joint time use being location-dependent. We rationalize this finding using a model in which the chosen time allocation is the outcome of a dual-self decision process with an indoor and an outdoor self. The two selves have different tastes for time alone, time with family, and time with friends. Weather conditions can change the influence of each self, and thereby the corresponding preferences for joint time use. We test the predictions of the model empirically by drawing on methods from the household economics literature. The test results support the hypothesis that weather affects joint time use insofar it affects where the activities take place.
Disciplines :
Domaines particuliers de l’économie (santé, travail, transport...)
Auteur, co-auteur :
Cosaert, Sam ✱; University of Antwerp
Nieto, Adrián ✱; Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research - LISER
TATSIRAMOS, Konstantinos ✱; University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance (FDEF) > Department of Economics and Management (DEM)
✱ Ces auteurs ont contribué de façon équivalente à la publication.
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Temperature and Joint Time Use
Date de publication/diffusion :
mai 2023
Maison d'édition :
IZA Institute of Labor Economics - Discussion Paper Series
FNR15647970 - The Implications Of Temperature For Social Interactions, Work Organization And Well-being, 2021 (01/12/2021-31/08/2024) - Adrian Nieto Castro
Intitulé du projet de recherche :
The Implications Of Temperature For Social Interactions, Work Organization And Well-being
Organisme subsidiant :
Luxembourg National Research Fund (C21/ SC/15647970)