Household production & the law

How much does a plate of chicken rice cost in Singapore? When asked, most people would be able to answer this question. What about non-market goods such as household production? It is not a common practice to ask how much an hour of household chores done by a homemaker is worth. This paper studied t...

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Main Authors: Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee, Ng, Sherlyn Su Lin, Tan, Bo Yao
Other Authors: Quah Teong Ewe, Euston
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73879
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-738792019-12-10T11:48:06Z Household production & the law Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee Ng, Sherlyn Su Lin Tan, Bo Yao Quah Teong Ewe, Euston School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects How much does a plate of chicken rice cost in Singapore? When asked, most people would be able to answer this question. What about non-market goods such as household production? It is not a common practice to ask how much an hour of household chores done by a homemaker is worth. This paper studied the current legal framework with regards to how to the law values household production, specifically in tort and matrimonial settlement cases. Methods such as the Contingency Valuation Method (CVM), Ordinary Least Square (OLS) regression, Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE), the Ordered Probit and Ordered Logit Model were used to obtained the Willingness to Pay (WTP) for reduction of hours of household production. The WTP for the average respondent was found to be $12.44 for 1 hour, $24.10 for 2 hours and $34.99 for 3 hours. This displays a diminishing willingness to pay and hence implies a diminishing marginal benefit from reduction in hours of housework. Heterogeneous effects were observed across the different groups of respondents. The WTP for main housework contributor was observed to be $14.87 for 1 hour which is $3.78 more than that of a non-main housework contributor. The results suggest that individuals who are main homemaker are likely to value homemaking more than someone who is not the main homemaker and hence, has an increased willingness to pay to reduce time spent on homemaking. The WTP obtained provides an additional method to the courts to better determine a fair compensation to the homemakers. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-18T01:21:51Z 2018-04-18T01:21:51Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73879 en Nanyang Technological University 32 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects
Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee
Ng, Sherlyn Su Lin
Tan, Bo Yao
Household production & the law
description How much does a plate of chicken rice cost in Singapore? When asked, most people would be able to answer this question. What about non-market goods such as household production? It is not a common practice to ask how much an hour of household chores done by a homemaker is worth. This paper studied the current legal framework with regards to how to the law values household production, specifically in tort and matrimonial settlement cases. Methods such as the Contingency Valuation Method (CVM), Ordinary Least Square (OLS) regression, Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE), the Ordered Probit and Ordered Logit Model were used to obtained the Willingness to Pay (WTP) for reduction of hours of household production. The WTP for the average respondent was found to be $12.44 for 1 hour, $24.10 for 2 hours and $34.99 for 3 hours. This displays a diminishing willingness to pay and hence implies a diminishing marginal benefit from reduction in hours of housework. Heterogeneous effects were observed across the different groups of respondents. The WTP for main housework contributor was observed to be $14.87 for 1 hour which is $3.78 more than that of a non-main housework contributor. The results suggest that individuals who are main homemaker are likely to value homemaking more than someone who is not the main homemaker and hence, has an increased willingness to pay to reduce time spent on homemaking. The WTP obtained provides an additional method to the courts to better determine a fair compensation to the homemakers.
author2 Quah Teong Ewe, Euston
author_facet Quah Teong Ewe, Euston
Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee
Ng, Sherlyn Su Lin
Tan, Bo Yao
format Final Year Project
author Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee
Ng, Sherlyn Su Lin
Tan, Bo Yao
author_sort Chia, Joycelyn Kit Yee
title Household production & the law
title_short Household production & the law
title_full Household production & the law
title_fullStr Household production & the law
title_full_unstemmed Household production & the law
title_sort household production & the law
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73879
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