Well, vis-à-vis the question of unpaid work that women are often performing, there are any number of ways that budgets end up impacting on that kind of unpaid work.
To give you an example, with something like child care--performed on an unpaid basis in the home, say, or performed on a paid basis in a child care centre, say--the availability of government programs that make it possible to access child care centres will affect women's unpaid work in the home. They may, for example, be able to choose to put children in child care and then they have perhaps the option of entering the labour force, for example, an option that might not be open to them if the costs of child care were prohibitive.
That's a concrete example of how a government policy could impact the choices of women based on the fact that they must make choices around the unpaid work that they are doing vis-à-vis child care.
So any number of policies have other impacts on any of the unpaid work that's done in the economy--caring for disabled, elderly, young people, and all kinds of things.