Engendering economic policy in Africa.
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Date
2015-07
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Abstract
Despite Africa's relatively commendable growth performance since 2000, growth has not been accompanied by structural transformations. First, there has been little diversification from agriculture into industry, particularly manufacturing. Second, the poverty headcount and inequality remain high in many countries, even as African countries continue to rank lowest on the United Nations Development Programme's Gender Inequality Index. This contribution goes beyond the individualistic approach of supply-side policies and unveils deeper mechanisms that need to be tackled for the two transformations (diversification and inequality reduction) to occur. It demonstrates that gender inequality relies on unwritten but dominant social norms, hence, informal institutions. The removal of formal legislation that constrains women's agency, the enactment of formal laws, and the implementation of economic policies designed specifically to create incentives for behavior change are recommended.
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Structural transformation, gender inequality, informal institutions, Africa JEL Codes: D63, O55
Citation
Juan Carlos Campaña, Jose Ignacio Giménez-Nadal, José Alberto Molina. (2018) Gender Norms and the Gendered Distribution of Total Work in Latin American Households. Feminist Economics 24:1, pages 35-62. Cruz Caridad Bueno, Errol A. Henderson. (2017) Bargaining or Backlash? Evidence on Intimate Partner Violence from the Dominican Republic. Feminist Economics 23:4, pages 90-116. Cheryl Doss, Abena D. Oduro, Carmen Diana Deere, Hema Swaminathan, William Baah-Boateng, Suchitra J. Y.. (2017) Assets and shocks: a gendered analysis of Ecuador, Ghana and Karnataka, India. Canadian Journal of Development Studies/Revue canadienne d'études du développement 0:0, pages 1-18.