TV Dinner
The TV dinner – and other convenient innovations which emerged over the same period – have made a lasting economic impression.
The way educated women spend their time in the United States and other rich countries has changed radically over the past half a century. Women in the US now spend around 45 minutes per day in total on cooking and cleaning up; that is still much more than men, who spend just 15 minutes a day. But it is a vast shift from the four hours a day which was common in the 1960s. We know all this from time-use surveys conducted around the world. And we know the reasons for the shift. One of the most important of those is a radical change in the way food is prepared. As Tim Harford explains, the TV dinner – and other convenient innovations which emerged over the same period – have made a lasting economic impression.
Producer: Ben Crighton
Editors: Richard Knight and Richard Vadon
(Image: TV Dinner, Credit: Shutterstock)
Last on
Sources and related links
Alison Wolf - The XX Factor, p80-85
Valerie Ramey - “Time spent in home production in the 20th century” NBER Paper 13985 (2008)
Valerie Ramey - “A century of work and leisure” NBER Paper 12264 (2006)
Cutler, David, Edward Glaeser and Jesse Shapiro - “Why have Americans become more obese?” Journal of Economic Perspectives (2003) 17, no. 3: 93-118 doi:10.1257/089533003769204371
Broadcasts
- Sat 1 Apr 2017 02:50GMTѿý World Service except Online, Australasia, News Internet & UK DAB/Freeview
- Sat 1 Apr 2017 19:50GMTѿý World Service except East and Southern Africa, News Internet & West and Central Africa
- Mon 3 Apr 2017 03:50GMTѿý World Service Online & UK DAB/Freeview only
Podcast
-
50 Things That Made the Modern Economy
The stories of inventions, ideas and innovations which helped create the economic world