Posted on 01/30/2012 1:58:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind
The life of a homemaker is one that includes an endless amount of demands and to-dos. Depending on the size of the home and family, the position of homemaker can go well beyond the usual nine to five. We examined some of the tasks that a homemaker might do to find out how much his or her services would net as individual professional careers. We only take into consideration tasks which have monetary values and use the lowest value for each calculation.
Private Chef
Meal preparation is one of the major tasks of most homemakers. From breakfast to dinner, there is plenty of meal planning and cooking to be done. The American Personal Chef Association reports that its personal chefs make $200 to $500 a day. Grocery shopping is another chore that needs to be factored in. A homemaker must drive to the supermarket, purchase the food and deliver it to the home. Grocery delivery services charge a delivery fee of $5 to $10.
Total cost for services: $1,005 per five day work week x 52 weeks = $52,260 per year.
House Cleaner
A clean and tidy home is the foundation of an efficient household. Typical cleaning duties include vacuuming, dusting, sweeping, scrubbing sinks as well as loading the dishwasher and making beds. Professional maids or house cleaning service providers will charge by the hour, number of rooms or square footage of the home. For example, bi-weekly cleaning of a 900-square-foot, two-bedroom apartment with five rooms, costs $59-$124. A 1,300 square-foot, single-story home with seven rooms runs $79-$150. A 2,200 two-story, three-bedroom home with nine rooms averages $104-$180. Additional tasks such as oven or refrigerator cleaning and dusting mini blinds can run an extra $20-$25.
Total cost for services: $118 per week X 52 Weeks = $6,136 per year.
Child Care
Homemakers provide full-time, live-in child care. This type of service from a professional provider would usually come with a host of perks including health insurance, paid vacation and sick days, federal holidays off, dental and vision coverage, and bonuses. The International Nanny Association's 2011 survey found that nannies make $600 to $950 per week in gross wages, on average.
Total cost for services: $600 a week plus perks/benefits x 52 Weeks = $31,200 per year.
Driver
A private car service might seem like a high-end luxury to most, but the beneficiaries of a homemaker get this service on a daily basis. Companies like Red Cap, which provides personal drivers that use the client's own car as the means of transportation, offer a glimpse into the cost of this homemaker task. An elite membership which includes 365 days of unlimited, round-trip service is $1,000 a year plus 33 cents - $2.03 per minute.
Total cost for services: $1,000 per year + [(estimated miles driven 8000 miles / 50 MPH) x 60 min/hr x $0.33 per minute] = $4,168 total per year.
Laundry Service
Clean clothes come at a cost when you have to pay for the service that most homemakers do for free. Professional laundry services charge by the pound. For instance, Susie's Suds Home Laundry Service, Inc. in Texas charges 90 cents to $1.00 a pound to wash, dry, fold, hang and steam your clothes. Items that take longer to dry such as comforters, blankets, rugs and winter clothes are assessed at a price of $12-$15 each.
Total cost for services: $0.90 per pound x 4 pounds of clothes per day x 5 days per weeks x 52 weeks = $936 total per year.
Lawn Maintenance
Basic maintenance of the exterior property is a less common, but possible duty of a homemaker. This could include things such as mowing, debris removal, edging and trimming the lawn. These services cost about $30 a week on average.
Total cost for services: $30 per week x 52 weeks = $1,560 total per year.
The Bottom Line
Total for a year of all services is: $52,260 + $6,137 + $31,200 + $4,168 + $936 + $1,560 = $96,261 per year.
The daily work of a homemaker can sometimes be taken for granted by his or her family members. However, these services could earn a homemaker a considerable wage if he or she took those skills to the marketplace. Homemakers in general contribute a lot more to the home in addition to these tasks, and no amount of money can fill those needs.
I want my money......
ridiculous.
a job is worth whatever someone is willing to pay.
to compare a mom who pours milk and cereal into a bowl with a personal chef is ludicrous. as is all the rest.
Hmm...I do all of that for myself. In the interest of fairness I believe the government owes me a check. Pay up, suckas.
Just sent this to my wife...probably will have picket signs in the front yard when I get home from work...
Ditto for the man of the house. What is the value of having a live-in protection service, sex on demand, handyman skills and a claim on his future income? Add all those things up and see who comes out ahead.
Sounds like a good reason for wome to stay home and take care of the family to me. You know, aside form the having a parent at home to take care of the kids, instead of kids raising themselves thing.
You know the government will want their portion of this income.
Doesn’t really depend upon how good the sex is? ouch hey!
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I'm willing to pay someone to cook my meals, clean my house, and do my laundry.
They said they used the lowest valuation for each? Not even close.
chef?
cereal, balogna sandwich and a TV dinner or call for pizza
how does McDonalds workers make in an hour? $8? Cuz all of the above took about 18 minutes. BTW- Who shops every day?
house cleaner?
Right, we run the vacuum once a day in the living room, this takes about 10 minutes. How much does a hotel maid make?
child care
That is Barney’s job
laundry service?
75 cents to wash and 50 cents to dry at the corner laundro-mat
lawn maintainence??
seriously??
If you were to add up all the traditional jobs a man does around the house: electrician, plumber, landscaper, computer technician, etc, how much is he worth?
Probably more than the housewife, if you’re trying to compare duties.
It is, to be sure, a case of working for myself. The downside is that the boss is an idiot.
electrician, plumber etc sound like higher paying duties than short order cook and maid etc
I am thinking that for MOST situations, MOST men are not doing any of those things on a daily, week-in, week-out basis. They might handle the occasional “urgent” minor repair, but they are not putting in the hours and hours that MOST women are putting into keeping up a household.
(flaming now anticipated)
Technically, I have to give you some credit. However, you were obviously absent the day they gave the whole lesson about picking your battles.
The whole thing is absurd, and is only good for tearing apart families by introducing strife into the marriage (”Well, dear, your day at the office may be tough, but I’m not paid enough”). Remember, marriage is a union of two, not just the individual looking out for his/her own best interest.
I have a brother in law who was in the middle of doing a one man remodel of my sisters main bathroom when she and the other girls got on this conversation.
As a contractor, I priced the remodel at about $15,000, he did a roofing repair while I was there, he drove a 40 year old pick up and kept it alive and cheaply repaired himself, he was a scout in the Army and served as a pretty good body guard and security guard for the family. Every time he fixes a leak, or the ice maker, or just about everything that he does there, is much more difficult, usually impossible, for her to duplicate, than for him to duplicate what she does, in fact at some point or another he does do everything that she does, but you will not find her under the house, in the deep cold mud, in 30 degree weather, fixing a broken water line.
These lists are stupid
lol.
I am not going to go into battle, I’m pretty much out of ammo now. :p
Agreed. And the figures listed for the “housewife” duties are just unbelievable. They fail to take into account that some nights it is Hamburger Helper for dinner, and the laundry is in the dryer for a couple days. Dust bunnies lurk behind things.... just reality.
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