
The Theory of the Leisure Class
An economic mystery: Why do the
poor seem to have more free time than the rich?
By Steven E. Landsburg
slate.com Friday, March 9, 2007, at
1:23 PM ET
As you've probably heard, there's been an explosion of
inequality in the United States over the past four decades.
The gap between high-skilled and low-skilled workers is
bigger than ever before, and it continues to grow.

How can we close the gap? Well, I suppose we could round
up a bunch of assembly-line workers and force them to mow
the lawns of corporate vice presidents. Because the gap I'm
talking about is the gap in leisure time, and it's the least
educated who are pulling ahead.
In 1965, leisure was pretty much equally distributed
across classes. People of the same age, sex, and family size
tended to have about the same amount of leisure, regardless
of their socioeconomic status. But since then, two things
have happened. First, leisure (like income) has increased
dramatically across the board. Second, though everyone's a
winner, the biggest winners are at the bottom of the
socioeconomic ladder.
To quantify those changes, you've got to decide exactly
what leisure means. You can start by deciding what it's not.
Surely working at your desk or on the assembly line is not
leisure. Neither is cleaning or ironing. But what about
standing around the water cooler, riding the train to work,
gardening, pet care, or tinkering with your car? What about
playing board games with your children?
Those are judgment calls, but it turns out not to matter
very much what calls you make. When professors
Mark Aguiar and Erik Hurst combined the results of
several large surveys (including studies where randomly
chosen subjects kept detailed time diaries), they found that
by any definition, the trends are clear.
In 1965, the average man spent 42 hours a week working at
the office or the factory; throw in coffee breaks, lunch
breaks, and commuting time, and you're up to 51 hours.
Today, instead of spending 42 and 51 hours, he spends 36 and
40. What's he doing with all that extra time? He spends a
little on shopping, a little on housework, and a lot on
watching TV, reading the newspaper, going to parties,
relaxing, going to bars, playing golf, surfing the Web,
visiting friends, and having sex. Overall, depending on
exactly what you count, he's got an extra six to eight hours
a week of leisure—call it the equivalent of nine extra weeks
of vacation per year.
For women, time spent on the job is up from 17 hours a
week to 24. With breaks and commuting thrown in, it's up
from 20 hours to 26. But time spent on household chores is
down from 35 hours a week to 22, for a net leisure gain of
four to six hours. Call it five extra vacation weeks.
A small part of those gains is because of demographic
change. The average American is older now and has fewer
children, so it's not surprising that he or she works less.
But even when you compare modern Americans to their 1965
counterparts—people with the same family size, age, and
education—the gains are still on the order of 4 to 8 hours a
week, or something like seven extra weeks of leisure per
year.
But not for everyone. About 10 percent of us are stuck in
1965, leisurewise. At the opposite extreme, 10 percent of us
have gained a staggering 14 hours a week or more. (Once
again, your gains are measured in comparison to a person
who, in 1965, had the same characteristics that you have
today.) By and large, the biggest leisure gains have gone
precisely to those with the most stagnant incomes—that is,
the least skilled and the least educated. And conversely,
the smallest leisure gains have been concentrated among the
most educated, the same group that's had the biggest gains
in income.
Aguiar and Hurst can't explain fully that rising
inequality, just as nobody can explain fully the rising
inequality in income. But there are, I think, two important
morals here.
First, man does not live by bread alone. Our happiness
depends partly on our incomes, but also on the time we spend
with our friends, our hobbies, and our favorite TV shows.
So, it's a good exercise in perspective to remember that by
and large, the big winners in the income derby have been the
small winners in the leisure derby, and vice versa.
Second, a certain class of pundits and politicians are
quick to see any increase in income inequality as a problem
that needs fixing—usually through some form of
redistributive taxation. Applying the same philosophy to
leisure, you could conclude that something must be done to
reverse the trends of the past 40 years—say, by rounding up
all those folks with extra time on their hands and putting
them to (unpaid) work in the kitchens of their "less
fortunate" neighbors. If you think it's OK to redistribute
income but repellent to redistribute leisure, you might want
to ask yourself what—if anything—is the fundamental
difference.
