For this week,
we shall look into leisure as an indicator of quality of life, of living in
relation to GDP.
Before we go
into the relationship between leisure and GDP, we have to understand at least
in basics the fact of leisure in one’s life. What do we make of the word
leisure; in other words, what is leisure. Leisure as it is a very complex
subject and researchers have gone into the intricacies of leisure such as kinds
of leisure and the very origin of leisure. All those details we need not
concern ourselves at present but focus on the basic qualities associated with
leisure.
The common
meaning of leisure is free time from work, from business, from occupation. Leisure is at the opposite end of the
spectrum of work life. It primarily refers to time spent away from business,
from work, from job etc.
Now, if you are
an employee of some firm, some company or some institution of some kind, say, a
college, a shopping mall, you definitely have what is commonly called working
hours; 9 to 5 is a general phrase pointing out that you work 8 hours every day.
It is said that the idea of 8 hours of work came very late and earlier the
working hours were more than 8, going up to 12 or more. With the efforts of
some activists, it is said, the working duration was reduced; all this happened
in the West some 300 hundred years ago. The day of an individual, that is 24
hours of a day, is divided into three 8 hour segments: 8 hours for the family, 8 hours of rest and sleep and 8 hours of
work. This tripartite division of a day helps achieve balance between
occupational engagement and domestic life with adequate rest. Domestic
togetherness, it is supposed, gives peace of mind; eight hours of rest and
sleep assured physical health which enables an individual to earn for living
with 8 hours of work. This is all the general concept of work and life balance.
Now, let us come
to leisure and its implications. First, it means free time from work. Please do
not confuse with tea breaks and lunch breaks you have at your work places.
Indeed, even those official breaks can be turned into leisure by an individual;
it depends on him. But here, we must go to another aspect of free time. Free
time is spent on some activities or other.
We see that leisure includes two facts:
time of leisure and the activities done during leisure. Based on these
two facts of leisure, we can see how leisure reflects the social status of an
individual.
If you are an employee of some institution where there will
be specific working hours schedules, first of all, you cannot choose your
leisure time. Your leisure time is decided in a way by your employer. At what
time your work starts is decided by the employer which is his privilege, his
choice, his legitimate decision. In other words, at a simple level, the social
status differs between the two, one who cannot choose his leisure time and one
who can choose his leisure time and also decide upon your leisure time. These
are all common facts taken for granted and understood without any difficulty.