The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
Business and Money

employers requisitioned our homes and our time

  • Written by Julie P. Smith, Honorary Associate Professor, Australian National University

Working from home during COVID-19 appeared to cost us little.

Yet employers effectively requisitioned part of those homes.

While necessary, it was far from costless to us, and our generosity shouldn’t be taken for granted.

Bureau of Statistics figures show that during April and May about half[1] the workforce worked from home.

Working at home has been far from costless

Preliminary results from a survey of more than 2,000 households[2] suggest paid workers put in about as many paid hours per day as before (half to one hour less) but that unpaid work skyrocketed, by an extra five hours[3] per day for women, and an extra two and a half hours for men.

Much of the increase was in childcare. Three in four[4] Australians who live with children kept them home.

Read more: Working from home: what are your employer's responsibilities, and what are yours?[5]

Some of it was in extra cleaning and washing, costs that for the moment (along with, for some workplaces, rent) many employers no longer needed to bear.

Few of us working from home will bother to bill our employers for the extra heating, office furniture, office consumables, home phone and internet use, toilet paper and coffee we’ve had to fork out for.

The Tax Office has indicated it will disallow[6] deductions for tea, coffee and toilet paper saying, “just because you have to provide those things for yourself doesn’t make them deductible”.

Akin to the requisitioning of assets permitted by the state in emergencies, employers have in effect requisitioned parts of our homes – rent free and without paying utility costs.

Read more: Forget work-life balance – it's all about integration in the age of COVID-19[7]

With more people using each home, and more meals cooked and eaten at home, time in the kitchen has soared. As supermarket shopping has become less appealing, consumer durables such as bread-makers[8] and freezers have been brought in. Backyard vegetable gardens and chicken runs[9] have popped up.

Most of the extra work has fallen to women. Surveys often understate it by asking only about the “primary[10]” activity in each quarter hour block rather than secondary activities (which often include childcare) undertaken at the same time. Multitasking intensifies work.

How do we make it count?

employers requisitioned our homes and our time Counting for Nothing, released in 1988[11] In an explosive book released more than 30 years ago entitled Counting for Nothing[12], New Zealand politician and economist Marilyn Waring described the dominant method of accounting for work as “applied patriarchy[13]”. The tool is gross domestic product (GDP), a measure that mostly only takes account of work that is paid. The point was that unpaid household work and care counted for nothing. Since then, time use surveys have found that non-market household production is very large – in Australia, equivalent to an extra half[14] of GDP. This matters, because its exclusion allows GDP to give us a distorted idea of progress. In each normal year the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development forecasts growth in developed nations of between 2% and 4%. That’s growth in gross domestic product. OECD calculations released in 2018 suggest that as much as a third[15] of that growth – 0.84 to 1.79 percentage points – is an artefact, created by the shift from what had been unpaid household work and childcare[16] into to paid household work and childcare. That is, the official figures have presented a mirage. Parents have replaced unpaid childcare – which is not counted in GDP – with paid childcare, which is counted. Read more: The National Breastfeeding Strategy is a start, but if we really valued breast milk we'd put it in the GDP[17] The switch has been recorded as “growth”, but it hasn’t been growth in work done or services provided. It is better described as accounting rather than economic growth. If the accounting was done properly – if countries such Australia properly counted the value of unpaid household and services – it would show much lower growth and more frequent recessions. And if our environment and resources (another omission except when they are exploited) had been properly accounted for, GDP growth would be lower again. The household services artefact has been reversed during the COVID-19 lockdown. Many of us have been doing as much or more than we did, but less of it has been counted. As it happens, the value of services provided by the home itself are included in GDP, through rent for renters and “imputed rent” for home owners. Home-grown produce is included as well, but unpaid human-provided services are not. It’s as if it didn’t happen The weak March quarter GDP result[18] strengthened calls for extra spending on infrastructure – things such as mines[19], pipelines[20] and fast trains to airports[21]. Days later the prime minister announced that childcare would no longer be free and JobKeeper for childcare workers would be replaced by a less generous subsidy[22]. It’s not what might have been expected after a historic opportunity to rethink productivity and wellbeing. Putting money into the care sector creates twice as many jobs per dollar[23] as putting it into construction. A higher proportion of investment in the care sector also flows to women, whose paid work has been disproportionately hit by the shutdown[24]. Read more: She won't be right, mate: how the government shaped a blokey lockdown followed by a blokey recovery[25] Things that would help include increased worker protection against white collar sweatshops[26]), expanded and reconfigured tax deductions for working from home, a paid allowance for home schooling costs[27] during the shutdown and a shorter working week[28] to rebalance roles at home. Behind everything should lie proper accounting for care work. Without it we are likely to continue to rely on the generosity of unpaid working women, acting as if it is free.

References

  1. ^ half (www.abs.gov.au)
  2. ^ 2,000 households (melbourneuni.au1.qualtrics.com)
  3. ^ five hours (www.abc.net.au)
  4. ^ Three in four (www.abs.gov.au)
  5. ^ Working from home: what are your employer's responsibilities, and what are yours? (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ disallow (www.abc.net.au)
  7. ^ Forget work-life balance – it's all about integration in the age of COVID-19 (theconversation.com)
  8. ^ consumer durables such as bread-makers (www.finder.com.au)
  9. ^ Backyard vegetable gardens and chicken runs (www.abc.net.au)
  10. ^ primary (www.researchgate.net)
  11. ^ Counting for Nothing, released in 1988 (www.bwb.co.nz)
  12. ^ Counting for Nothing (www.bwb.co.nz)
  13. ^ applied patriarchy (www.themonthly.com.au)
  14. ^ half (www.abs.gov.au)
  15. ^ third (www.oecd-ilibrary.org)
  16. ^ unpaid household work and childcare (www.onlineopinion.com.au)
  17. ^ The National Breastfeeding Strategy is a start, but if we really valued breast milk we'd put it in the GDP (theconversation.com)
  18. ^ March quarter GDP result (theconversation.com)
  19. ^ mines (www.theaustralian.com.au)
  20. ^ pipelines (www.afr.com)
  21. ^ fast trains to airports (www.smh.com.au)
  22. ^ less generous subsidy (www.abc.net.au)
  23. ^ twice as many jobs per dollar (wbg.org.uk)
  24. ^ disproportionately hit by the shutdown (theconversation.com)
  25. ^ She won't be right, mate: how the government shaped a blokey lockdown followed by a blokey recovery (theconversation.com)
  26. ^ white collar sweatshops (www.futurework.org.au)
  27. ^ home schooling costs (www.genvic.org.au)
  28. ^ shorter working week (www.theguardian.com)

Authors: Julie P. Smith, Honorary Associate Professor, Australian National University

Read more https://theconversation.com/about-that-spare-room-employers-requisitioned-our-homes-and-our-time-139854

Business Times

Partnership repaints approach to tradie mental health crisis

Haymes Paint Shop has supercharged its commitment to blue-collar counselling service TIACS to encourage Aussie tradies to ‘...

YepAI Emerges as AI Dark Horse, Launches V3 SuperAgent to Revolut…

November 24, 2025 – YepAI today announced the launch of its V3 SuperAgent, an enhanced AI platform designed to streamlin...

What SMEs Should Look For When Choosing a Shared Office in 2026

Small and medium-sized enterprises remain the backbone of Australia’s economy. As of mid-2024, small businesses accounted f...

The Times Features

The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this

You might know Australia’s dietary guidelines[1] from the famous infographics[2] showing the typ...

Why a Holiday or Short Break in the Noosa Region Is an Ideal Getaway

Few Australian destinations capture the imagination quite like Noosa. With its calm turquoise ba...

How Dynamic Pricing in Accommodation — From Caravan Parks to Hotels — Affects Holiday Affordability

Dynamic pricing has quietly become one of the most influential forces shaping the cost of an Aus...

The rise of chatbot therapists: Why AI cannot replace human care

Some are dubbing AI as the fourth industrial revolution, with the sweeping changes it is propellin...

Australians Can Now Experience The World of Wicked Across Universal Studios Singapore and Resorts World Sentosa

This holiday season, Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), in partnership with Universal Pictures, Sentosa ...

Mineral vs chemical sunscreens? Science shows the difference is smaller than you think

“Mineral-only” sunscreens are making huge inroads[1] into the sunscreen market, driven by fears of “...

Here’s what new debt-to-income home loan caps mean for banks and borrowers

For the first time ever, the Australian banking regulator has announced it will impose new debt-...

Why the Mortgage Industry Needs More Women (And What We're Actually Doing About It)

I've been in fintech and the mortgage industry for about a year and a half now. My background is i...

Inflation jumps in October, adding to pressure on government to make budget savings

Annual inflation rose[1] to a 16-month high of 3.8% in October, adding to pressure on the govern...