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Critical Social Policy
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Gender, (de)commodification, economic (in)dependence and autonomous households: the case of Sweden

Anita Nyberg

National Institute for Working Life, Sweden, Anita.Nyberg{at}niwl.se

Sweden has been considered both `worker friendly' and `women friendly'. Both workers and women have called upon the welfare state to support their demands and they have also had some of their requests granted. Feminists' oldest and most important demand has been economic independence from men and the capacity to form and maintain an autonomous household including children.1 The article investigates whether women were closer to these goals in Sweden in the 1990s than in the 1970s, and whether this was achieved by commodification (paid work) and/or decommodification (transfers from the welfare state). The result is that women as a whole have become more economically independent of men in families, thanks to paid work, and that lone mothers' capacity to form and maintain an autonomous household has been upheld by transfers from the welfare state. However, the capacity of lone mothers to support themselves and their children through paid work has decreased. Overall, by the 1990s, women in Sweden were more economically independent from men than they had been in the 1970s. Similarly women's capacity to form and maintain an autonomous household had become greater, however, this is through higher transfers, not higher earnings from the labour market.

Key Words: commodification • decommodification • Sweden • welfare state • women's autonomy

Critical Social Policy, Vol. 22, No. 1, 72-95 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/02610183020220010701


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