, a PhD student in the at the 做厙勛圖, says now may be the time to introduce universal wages in the United States.
In in the泭Washington Post’s Made by History泭section, Sapere argues that while the pandemic has rendered housework more visible, it still has not become more valued. Without monetary compensation, we wont adequately recognize how housework underpins the economy, he writes.
Moreover, after a year of sheltering in place and social distancing, with all its consequences, including overworked and overwhelmed mothers泭and women at their breaking point, the demand for this type of universal wage seems all the more relevant.泭
The idea of a universal wage dates at least to the late 19th century, when feminists began advocating recognition and compensation for housework, based on its economic importance. Tracing the history of the Wages for Housework campaign, a small international movement based on the notion that housework was not just economically important but central to the functioning of capitalism, Sapere contends that now, with lives upended by the pandemic, the moment might be right to refuse a return to normal.
Sapere is a student in American Health Politics and Policies, a class taught by , the Charles E. and Dale L. Phelps Professor in Public Policy and Health, who is an associate professor of泭history at Rochester and a doctor at the泭Universitys .
