The labour market ate my babies : work, children and a sustainable future

Bibliographic Information

The labour market ate my babies : work, children and a sustainable future

Barbara Pocock

The Federation Press, 2006

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 230-238) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Listed in top 50 Management Books for 2006 in the Australian Financial Review BOSS magazine, January 2007, Volume 8. In The Labour Market Ate My Babies Barbara Pocock, acclaimed author of The Work/Life Collision, examines the impact of modern working life on our children. In this book, young Australians from all over the country, city and the bush, rich and poor, talk about the good and bad of parental work - the trade off between money and time, consumer riches versus time for each other. Pocock argues that the modern labour market is having a huge impact on today's youth and eating into our capacity to care. Children have become a market. Caring for kids and selling to kids is big business, as stressed, time-poor parents struggle to care for their children and salve their guilt with presents and pocket money. How will this future generation of workers weigh up the labour market and organise their lives? The Labour Market Ate My Babies argues that a sustainable future requires new policy approaches to work that incorporate the perspectives of children. We should: ensure that parents get the time they need away from work when they need it help parents get a good fit between how they want to work, and how they have to provide quality, low cost, public childcare options stop advertising to kids in ways that stimulate an early work/spend cycle.

Table of Contents

Introduction and overview Understanding households, work, and social reproduction Work, children and time versus money Job spillover: How parents' job affect young peopleGuilt, money and the market at work Future work and households: Transitions and sharing Kids as commodities? Childcare in Australia Runaway consumption, the work/spend cycle and youth Children, work and a sustainable future Appendix Data sources Bibliography Index

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