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The Jerusalem Post

Men or women: Who is more productive working from home? - study

 
 A man working from home works on his laptop from bed. (photo credit: MICRO BIZ MAG/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS)
A man working from home works on his laptop from bed.
(photo credit: MICRO BIZ MAG/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS)

The study collected data from dual-earning couples in China and Taiwan. It consisted of surveying 222 couples twice a day.

Couples are able to increase their own work productivity when their partner had a flexible work schedule, a study published last month in Personnel Psychology: The Study of People at Work found.

This is thought to be because a flexible work schedule, or the ability to work from home, allows a partner to complete more family tasks and housework.

While the above results might sound very positive, the study also found that a significant number of women felt guilty when their daily work tasks increased because it increased work-family conflict.

Additionally, the study states that home and family-based work created a feeling of psychological withdrawal from work for both women and men. Despite this, the study found no clear differences in patterns in husbands’ and wives' work and family experiences.

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Employees of the D-ID startup company work at the company's office in Tel Aviv (credit: AMIR COHEN/REUTERS)
Employees of the D-ID startup company work at the company's office in Tel Aviv (credit: AMIR COHEN/REUTERS)

The theory behind the study

The study collected data from dual-earning couples in China and Taiwan. It consisted of surveying 222 couples twice a day.

The aim of the study was to contextual ‘family systems theory’ during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Family systems theory was introduced by psychiatrists in the 1950s. It was seen as a revolutionary new way to look at the mind. The theory suggests that the family is a complex social system, where members influence each other’s behaviors and moods.

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