id,name,description,createdAt,updatedAt,datasetId,additionalInfo,link,dataPublishedBy 17903,Our World in Data based on Huberman & Minns (2007) and PWT 9.1 (2019),"{""link"": ""https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0014498307000058, https://www.rug.nl/ggdc/productivity/pwt/?lang=en"", ""additionalInfo"": ""From 1870–1938 the data is from Huberman & Minns (2007). From 1950–2017 the data is from Penn World Table (PWT) 9.1 (2019). PWT 9.1 sources its working hours data from the Total Economy Database, an updated version of the same source used by Huberman & Minns (TED, 2005).\n\nFurther details on the data from Huberman & Minns:\nThe measure is annual hours of full-time production workers (male and female) in non-agricultural activities. Annual hours are based on estimates of weekly working hours and weeks worked. The data “best approximate usual or normal hours” worked (p. 543).\nThe original sources are: 1870–1913: Huberman (2004); 1929–1938: ILO (1934–39), except for Canada (Ostry and Zaidi, 1972), U.S. (Jones, 1963; Owen, 1988), and Australia (Butlin, 1977). These sources in turn rely on a variety of primary data sources, particularly establishment surveys and labor force surveys.\n\nFurther details on the data from PWT 9.1/TED:\nThe measure is labeled “Average annual hours worked by persons engaged” (PWT label) and “Average annual hours worked per worker” (TED label). It refers to actual hours worked and is calculated as total annual hours worked divided by persons employed. Annual hours are based on estimates of weekly working hours and weeks worked.\nThe original sources are National Accounts data when available; when unavailable, other databases (e.g., the Asian Productivity Organization’s Asian Productivity Database) and academic publications are used. For a complete description of primary sources and definitions see TED’s detailed sources and methods guide (https://www.conference-board.org/retrievefile.cfm?filename=TED_SMDetailed_nov2017.pdf&type=subsite)"", ""dataPublishedBy"": ""Huberman & Minns (2007); PWT 9.1 (2019)""}",2020-09-23 15:02:50,2020-09-23 15:02:50,5173,"From 1870–1938 the data is from Huberman & Minns (2007). From 1950–2017 the data is from Penn World Table (PWT) 9.1 (2019). PWT 9.1 sources its working hours data from the Total Economy Database, an updated version of the same source used by Huberman & Minns (TED, 2005). Further details on the data from Huberman & Minns: The measure is annual hours of full-time production workers (male and female) in non-agricultural activities. Annual hours are based on estimates of weekly working hours and weeks worked. The data “best approximate usual or normal hours” worked (p. 543). The original sources are: 1870–1913: Huberman (2004); 1929–1938: ILO (1934–39), except for Canada (Ostry and Zaidi, 1972), U.S. (Jones, 1963; Owen, 1988), and Australia (Butlin, 1977). These sources in turn rely on a variety of primary data sources, particularly establishment surveys and labor force surveys. Further details on the data from PWT 9.1/TED: The measure is labeled “Average annual hours worked by persons engaged” (PWT label) and “Average annual hours worked per worker” (TED label). It refers to actual hours worked and is calculated as total annual hours worked divided by persons employed. Annual hours are based on estimates of weekly working hours and weeks worked. The original sources are National Accounts data when available; when unavailable, other databases (e.g., the Asian Productivity Organization’s Asian Productivity Database) and academic publications are used. For a complete description of primary sources and definitions see TED’s detailed sources and methods guide (https://www.conference-board.org/retrievefile.cfm?filename=TED_SMDetailed_nov2017.pdf&type=subsite)","https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0014498307000058, https://www.rug.nl/ggdc/productivity/pwt/?lang=en",Huberman & Minns (2007); PWT 9.1 (2019)