Skip to main content
Unsupported Browser
Your Browser is out of date and is not supported by this website.
Please upgrade to Firefox, Chrome, Internet Explorer 11, or Microsoft Edge.

Morley Gunderson Lecture in Industrial Relations and Labour Economics

Alumni
Community
2025 Morley Gunderson Lecture Banner - Time: At work and not at work

Join us on Thursday, April 3rd for the 2025 Morley Gunderson Lecture in Industrial Relations and Labour Economics, Time: At Work and Not at Work, delivered by Daniel Hamermesh, professor emeritus of economics at Royal Holloway University of London & University of Texas at Austin.

We will also award the Morley Gunderson Prize which honours current students or alumni who combine outstanding personal achievement with significant service to the Centre.

This is a free event and all are welcome. Seating is limited, so please ensure you RSVP early to attend in-person. Alternatively, you can attend virtually via livestream.

Time is our scarcest resource. Compared to income, the amount of time at our disposal has grown much less rapidly over the last century. That’s true in rich countries, like Canada and the U.S., but is increasingly also true in less developed countries. For the average working adult, work time constitutes barely 20 percent of the typical week. It is only the second most common activity, being far behind sleep time, but slightly ahead of TV-watching; and yet, economists and others analyze work time much more thoroughly than the more important non-work time. This lecture discusses both work and non-work, concentrating particularly on differences in how time is spent across such characteristics as gender, age, immigrant status, and income, and on how it is used differently across counties. Dr. Daniel Hamermesh focuses on how the shortage of time affects behavior, and how these effects differ across these same demographic and economic characteristics. He asks the question: What would we do with the extra time if we suddenly got more time each day, week, or year? The answer is surprising and fairly distressing, but his talk culminates with a discussion of policies that might make the increasing scarcity of time less burdensome.