Abstract
Robert Drago (2011)
"Secondary Activities in the 2006 American Time Use Survey"
A major criticism of the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) is that, with the exception
of childcare, the survey does not systematically collect information about activities
respondents did while they were doing something else. The ATUS focuses on collecting
information about respondents' main (or primary) activities; when respondents volunteer
that they were doing secondary activities, this information is recorded by the
interviewers, but it is not coded and does not appear in the final data. This study is an
analysis of these additional secondary activity data from 2006. The study provides
descriptive information about who reported secondary activities and the activities they
reported. It also quantifies the secondary activity time that was spent in nonmarket work
and examines whether the omission of these data impacts valuations of nonmarket work.
Finally, it evaluates the quality of the voluntarily-reported secondary activity data.
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