Independent Researchers Blog 4 | Everyday life of working women in Georgia: Less leisure, more rush

Author: Salome Dumbadze, Georgian Institute of Public Affairs

Equal work, unequal time

A common assumption is that gender inequalities in time use might stem from differences in employment status, with unemployed women taking on a greater share of caregiving and domestic responsibilities while employed men engage in full-time paid work. However, findings from the 2020–2021 Georgia Time Use Survey suggest that these disparities persist even among full-time employed men and women, both in time allocation and in perceived time pressure.

A gender gap in feeling rushed

Psychologists describe chronic time pressure as both an awareness of the limited time and an emotional sense of being rushed – a state marked by worry, frustration, and anxiety (Denovan et al., 2017). Living this way is associated with increased stress, blurred focus, decreased mental and physical health (Craig and Brown, 2016; Cha and Papastefanou, 2020; Sussman and Sekuler, 2022; Löchner, Ulrich and Lux, 2024).

Among full-time employees, nearly 45% of women report always feeling rushed, compared to 34% of men. The rest (about 55% of women and 66% of men) say they feel rushed only sometimes or never.

One might be tempted to explain these findings by saying that some women are simply “more emotionally sensitive”, but the data shows a different pattern. At first glance, women did seem more likely to feel rushed, but once differences in how time was actually spent on duties and restorative activities were considered, statistically significant gender difference disappeared. Therefore, women’s greater number of reports of feeling rushed turned out to be unrelated to gender characteristics, but reflected an actual unequal distribution of time. Even though feeling rushed and time allocation seem to be inter-connected, we can’t determine for sure which is the cause is and which is the effect.

How time use is related to time pressure

According to the data even with the same employment status, daily time use still differs between men and women:

  • Full-time employed men devote more time to leisure and paid work than women.
  • Full-time employed women spend more time on unpaid household work and caretaking tasks than men.
  • Both men and women spend a similar amount of time on personal care (such as sleeping and eating) during weekdays, though women spend slightly more time on such activities on weekends.

When linked to how rushed people feel in association to time use in hours, distinct patterns emerged:

  • For women: Having more leisure time (both on weekdays and weekends) was associated with feeling less rushed. Although, perceived time pressure was not associated with other paid or unpaid activities.
  • For men: On weekends more leisure, (surprisingly) more paid work, and more personal care was associated with feeling less rushed. On weekdays, no activity showed a strong link with feeling rushed.

Conclusion

Among Georgia’s full-time employees, women have less leisure time and more unpaid duties, while men spend more time in both paid work and leisure. These differences echo the gap in how rushed people feel, suggesting that it is the rhythm of daily life (and not gender itself) that shapes how time is experienced.

For working women, having more leisure time (both on weekdays and weekends) was linked with feeling less rushed, while other daily activities showed no relationship. For working men, time use mattered mainly on weekends: more paid work, leisure, and personal care were each tied to feeling less time pressure.

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