2000
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2000.tb00844.x
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Accounting for Nonmarket Household Production Within a National Accounts Framework

Abstract: The satellite accounts illustrated in this paper reflect the household's role as a producer and an investor in durables as well as a consumer by modifying the NIPA's to (1) incorporate the value of nonmarket (unpaid) household work into GDP; and (2) treat expenditures on consumer durables as investment and measure the value of the services those durables provide. Additionally, an Input–Output (I–O) model highlights the household's functions as a producer and investor in much greater detail for the year 1992 by… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…Our strategy for imputing the value of household production is to value the amount of time spent by individuals on the basis of its replacement cost, as indicated by the average earnings of domestic servants or household employees (Kuznets, Epstein, and Jenks 1941: 432-433;Landefeld and McCulla 2000). Research suggests that there are significant differences among households in the quality and composition of the "outputs" of household production, as well as the efficiency of housework (National Research Council 2005: ch. 3).…”
Section: Components Of Limewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our strategy for imputing the value of household production is to value the amount of time spent by individuals on the basis of its replacement cost, as indicated by the average earnings of domestic servants or household employees (Kuznets, Epstein, and Jenks 1941: 432-433;Landefeld and McCulla 2000). Research suggests that there are significant differences among households in the quality and composition of the "outputs" of household production, as well as the efficiency of housework (National Research Council 2005: ch. 3).…”
Section: Components Of Limewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a module can quantify the economic importance of paid and unpaid household production (see e.g. Goldschmidt-Clermont and Pagnossin- Aligisakis, 1999 andLandefeld andMcCulla, 2000). The Statistical Office of the UK now regularly publishes such a module.…”
Section: Modules On Social Policy Human Capital and For Policy Analymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Landefeld and McCulla (2000) developed household production accounts that are a combination of market and nonmarket inputs (utilizing ATUS data) to produce output and are valued at market value or proxy for market value. They are a double-entry set of accounts, and include detailed input-output tables for household production.…”
Section: National Economic Accounts: Nonmarket Production Accountsmentioning
confidence: 99%