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Too Busy to Eat with the Kids? Parental Work and Children's Eating

Authors
Chen, Susan E.Moeser, AnkeNayga, Rodolfo M., Jr.
Issue Date
9월-2015
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
Time use; children' s eating patterns; parental time allocation
Citation
APPLIED ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES AND POLICY, v.37, no.3, pp.347 - 377
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
APPLIED ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES AND POLICY
Volume
37
Number
3
Start Page
347
End Page
377
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/92541
DOI
10.1093/aepp/ppv001
ISSN
2040-5790
Abstract
Parents influence their children's eating behavior by providing access to certain types of food, creating enjoyable mealtimes and associations with food, and by role modeling. In this study we investigate the association between parental employment and parental time spent eating with their children. Using data from the 2001/02 German Time Budget Survey, we explore associations between time spent eating with children and labor force participation in Germany. We find that parental labor force participation is negatively associated with time spent eating with children. Each additional hour of work per day by the mother is associated with a 2.4 minute decrease in the amount of time the mother spends eating with her children. For paternal hours of work, we find that the more time a father spends working, the less time the child spends eating with the father or with both parents. Overall, we find evidence of mother inter-gender time substitution and some amount of time/food away from home substitution. Understanding how parents allocate their time, where they are most likely to eat, and what drives these decisions is an important endeavor since parents play a critical role in shaping and reinforcing their children's eating practices.
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College of Life Sciences and Biotechnology > Department of Food and Resource Economics > 1. Journal Articles

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