What the study found
The study found that estimates of material standard of living based on men’s wages depend on household complexity. Populations with more complex households were less reliant on the male head of household’s income, so male-wage-based estimates were likely to understate their living standards.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say this matters because using male wages to compare living standards across times and places requires comparable household reliance on male income. The study suggests that the most comparable populations for this kind of comparison are those at similar stages of industrialization and the demographic transition.
What the researchers tested
The researcher examined how reliance on male income varied with household complexity and used a reductive model of material standard of living. The model included three factors: time spent on productive work, the market wage for men, and the female-to-male wage ratio.
What worked and what didn't
The analysis showed that nuclear households, which are typical in English-speaking countries, relied more on male income than more complex households found elsewhere. Including the female-to-male wage ratio did not change the ranking of material standard of living estimates based on male wages, although the author argues it may still be useful in comparisons of historical populations.
What to keep in mind
The abstract notes that household complexity in historical populations is seldom known, but it can be predicted using demographic and economic indicators. It also says the study’s conclusion about male-wage-based estimates depends on the assumption that household reliance on male income is comparable across populations.
Key points
- Male-wage-based estimates of material standard of living are less accurate for populations with complex households.
- Nuclear households were more reliant on male income than more complex households.
- Including the female-to-male wage ratio did not change the ranking of living standard estimates based on male wages.
- The author says comparable populations are those at similar stages of industrialization and the demographic transition.
- Household complexity in historical populations is seldom known, but the abstract says it can be predicted from demographic and economic indicators.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Household complexity affects wage-based living standard estimates
- Authors:
- Stefan Öberg
- Institutions:
- Lund University
- Publication date:
- 2026-01-26
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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