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Title: Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: The Effect of Time Spent Grooming on Wages
Citation Type: Journal Article
Publication Year: 2011
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Abstract: To most economists, personal grooming is a non-market activity. The standard view is that time spent in non-market activities is counterproductive as it reduces work effort and job commitment (). But grooming may be different. Grooming provides an important source of communication about workers, their values, social identities and personalities. There is reason to believe that certain productive personality traits may be inferred on the basis of personal grooming. In this paper, we use data from the American Time Use Survey's (2009) pooled cross-section 20032007 to investigate the effect of additional time spent grooming on earnings. The results show that the effect of grooming on earnings differs significantly by gender and race. These results cannot easily be reconciled with any one particular theory, but imply a complex interaction between several possible effects.
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Authors: DeLoach, Stephen B.; Das, Jayoti
Periodical (Full): Journal of Socio-eoonomics
Issue: 1
Volume: 40
Pages: 26-34
Data Collections: IPUMS Time Use - ATUS
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure
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