2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8381.2005.00215.x
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Wives’ Value of Time and Food Consumed Away from Home in Taiwan*

Abstract: In the present paper, we examine the relationship between wives' value of time and expenditures on food away from home (FAFH) in Taiwan between 1983 and 2000. An endogenous switching regression model is used to model the household's consumption decision on FAFH. The empirical results show that wives' value of time, household income, presence of young children and grandparents, and wives' educational attainment are important factors for both participation in consuming and amount spent on FAFH. The income elasti… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…However, dual‐career families, especially in urban areas, are often highly correlated with family income, so we omit parental salary (a major source of earned income) from family income to separate income and opportunity cost effects of time. Using the family participation in the labor market or wage rate to capture the effect of the opportunity cost of time and family income, excluding earned income, for an income effect is an extensively used method in studies on household production and consumption, such as Yen (), Jensen and Yen (), and Keng and Lin (). In past studies, the wage rate was quite often used to capture time opportunity cost.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, dual‐career families, especially in urban areas, are often highly correlated with family income, so we omit parental salary (a major source of earned income) from family income to separate income and opportunity cost effects of time. Using the family participation in the labor market or wage rate to capture the effect of the opportunity cost of time and family income, excluding earned income, for an income effect is an extensively used method in studies on household production and consumption, such as Yen (), Jensen and Yen (), and Keng and Lin (). In past studies, the wage rate was quite often used to capture time opportunity cost.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Grandparents are more involved in daily routines and spend more time with grandchildren whilst mothers were at work (Hamilton & Jenkins, 2015). Foods they choose for their grandchildren are generally considered healthy (Keng & Lin, 2005), which may reflect a lower intake of HSD amongst children. This study suggests that children of part-time employed fathers who used day care centres had low FV consumption.…”
Section: Nonparental Child Care Usagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other food demand studies that incorporate household production theory are by Kinsey (1983), Keng and Lin (2005), Park and Capps (1997) and Sabates et al (2001).…”
Section: A Brief Review Of Demand Theory and Empirical Studies Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, labor economists have made a working individual's wage the target of frequent empirical investigations, and predicted wage rates are regularly included in models explaining labor supply, demand for children and migration (Card 1999, Tokle and Huffman 1991, Blundell and MaCurdy 1999, Huffman and Feridhanusetyawan 2007. Keng and Lin (2005) show that as women's labor market earnings increase their household's demand for food-away-from-home increases. In addition, a few other studies have included the education of the household manager, a rough proxy for her opportunity cost of time, as a regressor in food demand equations.…”
Section: A Brief Review Of Demand Theory and Empirical Studies Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%