Productivity at Home
by Robert F. Abbott
Published on this site: August 17th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month
Increased productivity, the ability to get more value for
our time, our land, or our invested money, is as important
at home as it is in the workplace. Let's consider the case
of our imaginary friend Jane, and her grandmother.
Jane's grandmother had just one occupation after marrying
in her late teens: homemaker. She raised children, and she
cleaned and maintained the family home. That was a full-time
(and often more) job.
For example, Jane's grandmother spent at least half a day
and often more, on Mondays, Blue Mondays, washing clothes.
When Grandmother did laundry, she put a small load at a time
into a wringer washer. First the clothes went through a wash
cycle with soap. Then, she drained the washer, and refilled
it with fresh hot water for a rinse cycle. At the end of each
cycle, she fed each piece of clothing through a wringer which
squeezed out the excess water. After a couple of wash and
rinse cycles, the clothes landed in a tub, were carried outside,
and pinned to a clothesline, one at a time. And after drying,
each item was unpinned and carried back into the house. Of
course, almost all of the clothing in Grandmother's time then
had to be ironed.
On the other hand, when Jane needs only a few minutes to
do a load of washing. She gathers up a pile of clothes, puts
them in the washer, adds soap, turns on the water, and leaves.
The machine automatically takes care of all those steps Jane's
grandmother had to do by hand. When Jane returns to the automatic
washing machine half an hour later, she simply moves the clothes
to the dryer, which takes about a minute. In most cases, the
clothes require minimal or no ironing, and Jane folds them
and puts them away immediately.
Grandmother cooked on an electric range, which in itself
represented a big improvement over the wood stove her mother
used. Jane has a microwave oven, as well as an electric range,
and can make a meal more quickly. After the meal, Grandmother
spent at least half an hour washing dishes. Jane spends a
couple of minutes loading the dishwasher.
Jane, obviously, is more productive than her grandmother.
Not because she's necessarily better in any way or works any
harder, but because she has tools that allow her to be more
productive, to get the same amount of work done in less time.
That extra time allows her to earn an income outside the
home, which in turn increases the family's prosperity. And
so productivity in the home, like productivity at work, contributes
to a family's increasing standard of living.

Robert F. Abbott is the author of the forthcoming book,
Ownership Revolution: How Working People are Buying Up Big
Business, from which this article is taken. If you contribute
to a pension fund, mutual fund, or whole life insurance policy,
you're probably one of the new owners of the big corporations.
Find out more at http://www.TheNewOwners.com

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