G5 Artikkeliväitöskirja
The layers of inequality in paid domestic labour: a global study on domestic workers and precarious work
Tekijät: Jokela Merita
Kustantaja: University of Turku
Kustannuspaikka: Turku
Julkaisuvuosi: 2018
ISBN: 978-951-29-7344-6
eISBN: 978-951-29-7345-3
Verkko-osoite: http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN 978-951-29-7345-3
Rinnakkaistallenteen osoite: http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN 978-951-29-7345-3
This dissertation examines inequalities in paid domestic labour from a global comparative
perspective. I approach the subject through three different layers that represent the
factors identified in previous studies as shaping paid domestic labour and the position of
domestic workers in the labour markets: 1) the structural layer that refers to the socio-demographic
developments and structural mechanisms in the society, 2) the individual layer
that includes the characteristics of persons working in domestic service and the occupation,
and 3) the policy layer that comprises the political economy of paid domestic labour
and the policies influencing the employment of domestic workers. The dissertation consists
of three international peer reviewed articles that each tackles one of the layers from a
comparative perspective. For the empirical analyses three types of data are used: international
databases of macro-level indicators (World Bank, International Labour Organization),
micro-level survey data (Luxembourg Income Study) and policy documents.
In recent years, paid domestic labour, that is, household work that is performed in
private households has become a widely studied subject in social sciences particularly in
research related to gender, care and migration. Currently, domestic service is promoted
across countries not only as a way for upper and middle income households to reconcile
with work and family life but also, as one of the growing sectors of employment that is
supposed to provide job opportunities particularly for women, lower educated individuals
and migrants.
The results of the first article, a quantitative comparison of 74 countries, show that
higher income inequality within countries and higher proportion of migrants in a country
are associated with higher prevalence of paid domestic labour. The five-country comparison
of the second article demonstrates that precarious employment conditions (measured
here by part-time employment, low wages, short job tenure, and unemployment
experience) are more prevalent in paid domestic work compared to other industries.
Furthermore, the results show that across welfare regimes, working in the paid domestic
sector increases the risk of working in precarious employment settings. The results of
the third article covering domestic employment policies in OECD countries show that
policies related to domestic service may have a significant impact on the dynamics of
the sector and the precariousness of workers’ employment, and how welfare states across
world regulate (or disregard regulations) the sector of domestic services reflects the position
of domestic workers in these labour markets.
Thus, the three different layers – structural, individual, and policy – intersect in ways
that contribute to maintaining the ‘special’ position of domestic workers across countries:
the cultural undervaluation of domestic work, together with a strongly feminised workforce
that consists predominantly of migrants, places domestic workers at greater risk of
working under precarious employment conditions. Moreover, in many countries insufficient
care provisions and general legitimisation of domestic workers’ weaker employment
conditions drive households to turn to private domestic and care services. The
precarity of paid domestic labour derives partly from the multiple disadvantaged social
categories of the persons working in the sector. Paradoxically, the reasons for the inequalities
(gender, “race”, class, cultural background or nationality) in domestic service are the
same factors that account for their employment in the first place.
The issue of domestic workers’ remuneration and employment conditions remains
problematic, as it is directly linked to households’ abilities to pay for these services. Particularly
in countries where domestic workers are employed on a full-time basis and fill gaps in public care provisions, this poses a real challenge if households do not receive
support from the state. Thus, as paid domestic labour in the 21st century now seems to
be living its new era through globalisation and as part of the neoliberal organisation of
care, questions related to domestic workers’ status and working conditions again become
topical across the globe.