Measuring unpaid care in the Labour Account consultation

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Closes 28 Feb 2025

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2. Definition of care

More information: definition of care

Care work, whether paid or unpaid, consists of activities and responsibilities involved in meeting the physical, psychological, and emotional needs of care-dependent groups. 

Care-dependent groups require care to live independently due to functional limitations. These groups include children due to their young age, and adults with long-term health conditions or disability.

Care work for these groups range from: 

  • helping with direct, hands-on care tasks such as activities of daily living (e.g. feeding and bathing),
  • helping with more complex or indirect care tasks such as instrumental activities of daily living (e.g. cleaning, transportation, coordinating care), 
  • supervising and monitoring the care receiver

Adapted from Canada's Care Economy: A Conceptual Framework 

a. Do you broadly support the definition of care work used in the new Labour Account unpaid care estimates?

3. Range of measures

More information: valuation methods and recommended approach

Measures of unpaid childcare work have been produced by four different valuation methods. These methods apply different monetary values to the childcaring activity.

  • Individual function replacement cost method: equivalent occupation for each childcaring activity
  • Minimum wage replacement cost method: flat minimum wage
  • Housekeeper wage replacement cost method: relevant housekeeper wage
  • Opportunity cost method: wage of carer’s main occupation

The Individual function replacement cost method is the approach recommended by the ABS for valuing unpaid childcare. However, other methods have been presented in the information paper to provide a valuation range.

a. Do you find it useful to publish a range of estimates using different methodologies?

4. Market replacements for unpaid care activities

The ABS is considering which equivalent occupations the Individual function method should use for different caring activities. For example, the closest market value replacement for food preparation for children is a kitchenhand.

5. Presenting unpaid care estimates in context

The value derived by applying a median wage rate to all unpaid childcare hours has also been presented for context.

a. Is it useful to present estimates using the median wage rate for context?

6. Additivity between sex and age data

More information: additivity

The estimated unpaid childcare total for sex will not equal the total for age for every measurement method except the Minimum wage replacement cost method. The same occupation may have different applicable wage rates, depending on whether the wage rate was taken from the associated age group or the relevant sex of the unpaid child carer. 

In the information paper, the ABS has presented the age total rather than the sex total, as this is created from the finer classification breakdown of five age groups, compared to the sex categories.

To force the sex and age totals to align, some finer level data used to create the estimates will be omitted and the accuracy of the estimates will reduce.

a. What information is most useful for your data needs? (select one)

7. Age groupings

More information: age groupings

The Labour Account is currently being expanded to include sex and age breakdowns of some paid work estimates. This data can aid in comparing unpaid care work to the labour market.

Due to the input data used for each model, the proposed Labour Account paid work age groupings differ to the unpaid childcare valuation age groupings.

Paid work age groupings: 19 years and under, 20 – 24 years, 25 – 34 years, 35 – 44 years, 45 – 54 years, 55 – 64 years, 65 years and over

Unpaid childcare age groupings: 15 – 20 years, 21 – 34 years, 35 – 44 years, 45 – 54 years, 55 years and over

Consistent age groupings between the models would allow easier comparison, however modifying the age groupings may impact the accuracy of the estimates.

a. Which of these approaches would be better suited to your data needs?

8. Unpaid adult care

Unpaid adult care is the most difficult aspect of the care framework to populate, in particular indirect care for adults. These activities can be difficult to distinguish from other types of unpaid household work, and short-term direct adult care is not easily separated from care provided on an ongoing basis.

9. Other comments

If you have any questions about this consultation process, please email unpaid.care.consultation@abs.gov.au