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How much would you earn if you got paid for everything you did at home? Try the Cornhill Direct Calculator and have a chance of winning £100 of vouchers

241 replies

CarrieMumsnet · 28/01/2009 16:06

Apparently the average British family with children spends 73 hours on domestic chores per week; that?s over 65% of the time we?re awake spent on jobs around the house. And the cost of that work, if we were paid at market rates to do it, amounts to an average of £25,000 per family, per year. Cornhill Direct did the research and have come up with a 'household economy calculator', so that you can work out who in your family is worth the most. Just enter details of all the daily and weekly jobs each family member does and it will work out the value of that work (and demonstrate clearly who is doing the most )

Cornhill want to know what you think about the calculator ? obviously it?s a bit of fun but is there a more serious underlying point? is the true value of housework and domestic chores underestimated? are you surprised at how much you?re ?worth?? and was it a surprise to see who in your house is 'worth' the most? There is also anecdotal evidence that as the economy gets worse, everyone is doing more housework ? is this true in your family? Possibly it?s the only area we feel like we have control over at the moment?

You can find the calculator here and one top tip for using it - it gives you a choice as to whether you fill in your hours total for the day, week or month - we'd suggest week or month as we found there wasn't enough to put down for the day... but that may because we are all idle bints at MNHQ

Everyone who tries the calculator and takes part in this discussion will be entered into a prize draw to win £100 of vouchers from a company of your choice.

You can also download a copy of their e-book about managing the family finances if you fancy it.

Thanks

MNHQ

OP posts:
PeachyBAHonsPRSCertOnRequest · 28/01/2009 18:26

well can't get it working on my pc but I recently worked out that mmy carers allowance, with 2 children who are disabled and needing 24 / 7 watching (not mentioning the baby and NT child) effectuively equates to 17p per hour of actual labour (based upon each SN child separately as ca for 1 child id the same iyswim)

fabby

whoops · 28/01/2009 18:31

Mine came up with about £42k!
it was 16k though before I added the childcare in!

differentID · 28/01/2009 18:36

wow- £19,877 total for both me and dh. Very interesting. With my share being £14,680. I think that means I let dh do far to little around here.

ThingOne · 28/01/2009 18:36

We got a combined £50k. I counted childcare as 6am-8pm every day as ours are 5 and 2. Someone is always looking after a two year old. He got quite a good total, though .

muppetgirl · 28/01/2009 18:44

Why is my 'work' ie childcare/washing/cleaning etc etc calculated but dh's contribution of 12 hrs per day not mentioned and no chance to mention it????

(or did I miss the bit where I could put his job in ) otherwise it looks like he's incredibly lazy and I'm a goddamn superwoman)

tots2ten · 28/01/2009 19:00

Ours comes out at £45,231, My contributions is 94% and dh's 6%, dc's none.

PeachyBAHonsPRSCertOnRequest · 28/01/2009 19:09

Only if you put a snegative slant on it muppet; you could OTOH add his sum to his actual income and then have the two values couldn't you?

theresonlyme · 28/01/2009 19:16

£23.279
80% M
20% DH

I got bored though and only did 6 jobs. I know I am worth a lot more!

luckywinner · 28/01/2009 19:16

I got 50k too but that was mostly due to childcare.

theresonlyme · 28/01/2009 19:17

I think I might have done it wronf

theresonlyme · 28/01/2009 19:17

wrong again

slayerette · 28/01/2009 19:21

I tried but it was too boring

Hulababy · 28/01/2009 19:22

Hae completed it. Got total as a bit over £45k

thegirlwiththecurl · 28/01/2009 19:29

oooh - did this and it kicked off big style when I pointed out to DS that he was doing -9% of the average (he always makes out he is soooooo hard done by and was not impressed by this!). DH came out at 198% higher than the average dad, which is surprising but also depressing as I wonder how little some men do!!!!! Total household income was £44,000

smellen · 28/01/2009 19:32

£42.000 between us (about a 90/10 split)- and I'm 12% less active/good value than the average mum, with DH being 11% more active/better value than the average Dad.
What's all that about?!

Is there a monetary equivalent for filling in online surveys and entering MN comps?

MarlaSinger · 28/01/2009 19:33

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

smellen · 28/01/2009 19:33

I suppose I am doing this whilst burning dinner, so perhaps not...

StarlightMcKenzie · 28/01/2009 19:35

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

FrannyandZooey · 28/01/2009 20:26

we got 68 grand but i also put 24 hours a day childcare
it's true though
if you subtract childcare i only do £5000 worth of stuff
dp does £11000, inc childcare - without childcare, about the same as me

2pt4kids · 28/01/2009 20:35

Ours came out at £35,291 with me doing 98% of it!
Most of it comes under childcare tbh

In my area it would cost me £17k to put my 2 boys in full time nursery, so its prob not that far off!

IdrisTheDragon · 28/01/2009 20:38

Our total was about £42k with me doing 94% of it. Not sure how much childcare to put myself down doing though - it often feels like 24 hours a day...

FrazzledFairyFay · 28/01/2009 20:39

It was a very interesting calculation, but i found having to manually add in each extra chore was a bit tedious - it would be better if there was just one long list, so that you could leave at zero any chores not relevant to you

georgimama · 28/01/2009 20:45

Our total was 23,934 of which I do 21,014. We both work fulltime though.

Am a bit gutted, I always tell DH that what I do around the home is worth the difference in our earnings - apparently this is not true.

georgimama · 28/01/2009 20:49

I'm apparently 30% down on the average mum and DH is 38% up on the average dad. The average dad must be a lazy bugger in that case, and I'm guessing the average mum doesn't work.

popsycal · 28/01/2009 20:54

almost 59 grand - but it would not let me put 24 hour child care in - which i do and i am also a slattern
and i underestimated