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Gender Analysis for the PRSP and MDGs Monitoring Gulnara Febres, WBI Poverty Analysis Workshop, Tirana, Albania April 7 - 11, 2008 1 Gender Issues in the Balkan Countries’ PRSPs Issues: MDG indicators: gender-responsive? To evaluate gender sensitivity of the Balkan countries’ PRSPs To identify existing gaps in gendersensitive approach Potential opportunities 2 Why to Address Gender? Gender based inequalities slow economic growth and poverty reduction, and tend to be most extreme in the lowest income countries and poorest HHs Failure to conduct poverty diagnosis in a gender-responsive manner runs the risk of ignoring important avenues to poverty reduction. 3 What is Gender Equality? Gender equality means equal access to the “opportunities that allow people to pursue a life of their own choosing”— that is, gender equality in rights, resources, and voice (World Bank 2006, WDR). 4 What is Gender Equality? Equality of rights refers to equality under the law Equality of resources refers to equality of opportunity, including equality of access to human capital investments and other productive resources and to markets. Equality of voice captures the ability to influence and contribute to the political and development processes. 5 Key Elements of Gender Equality Gender equality in rights, resources, and voice Leveling the field of opportunities Household Economy & Markets Society Household resource and task allocations, fertility decisions Access to land, financial services, labor markets, technology Civic and political participation Aggregate economic performance (poverty reduction, growth) Domains of choices, domains for policy 6 Framework : Key Elements of Gender Equality Ties together key elements of gender equality* In the household: increased gender equality between men and women changes the allocation of HH expenditures, resulting in a larger share of resources devoted to children’s education and health. In the market, gender inequality is reflected in unequal access to land, credit, and labor markets, and in significantly less access to new production technologies. In society, gender inequality is expressed as restrictions to women’s participation in civic and political life. In addition to improving individuals’ lives, increased gender equality can contribute to better aggregate economic performance. *Source – WB Global Monitoring Report 2007 7 Pathways for Gender Equality There are several pathways through which gender equality in rights, resources, and voice stimulate productivity, earnings, and better child development outcomes, thus generating better development outcomes in an economy. 8 Gender equality ↔ growth? Increased gender equality in households, markets, society Women have better access to markets Women have better education and health Increased labor force participation by women, productivity, and earnings Income/consumption expenditure Current poverty reduction and economic growth Mothers have greater control over decision- making in households Improved well-being for children Differential savings rate Better health and educational attainment & greater productivity as adults Future poverty reduction and economic growth 9 Pathways for Poverty Reduction Women’s LF Participation, Productivity, and Earnings: Working women contribute to HH income and expenditure. In poor HH, such contributions can be crucial for keeping the HH out of poverty; this is the reason to increase access to education, markets (labor, land, credit), and technology. This increased access contributes to: current poverty reduction through higher consumption future poverty reduction through the impact on children’s accumulation of human capital and the potential impact on aggregate saving 10 Constraints to women’s LF participation Reproductive role Time burden of domestic tasks (KR-24.8% of women are kept at home due to care for children, elderly, sick or housekeeping vs. 1.5% of men) (Uganda, Zambia, Burkina Faso – time for collecting fire wood range from 125 to 664 hours per year) 11 Disincentives to women’s LF participation Current effect: Future effect: Wage gaps and discrimination against women in labor markets persuades women to stay home. The wage loss/segregation into low-paying jobs lead to underinvestment in girls education. 12 “Inequality trap”? Land: in LAC and SSA, 70-90% of land is owned by men. When women have access to land, they have less tenure rights. SSA-permanent land rights are held by men Women are less likely to apply for loans as they do not have assets to offer as collateral. Cumulative disadvantages (ethnicity, race, location and disability) 13 Pathways for Poverty Reduction Factors for Children’s Well-Being Women’s education, health Mothers’ greater control over resources more resources allocated to food and to children’s health and education. better child dev-t in the present intergenerational transmission of earnings capacity prospects for future poverty reduction 14 MDG 3 MDG 3: Promote gender equality and empower women Target 10: Eliminate gender disparities in primary and secondary education Target 11: Eliminate gender disparity in elected organs and decision making positions 15 MDG3 Effect on Other MDGs Gender equality and women’s empowerment are channels to attaining other MDGs — universal primary education (MDG2), lower under-five mortality (MDG4), improved maternal health (MDG5),and lower likelihood of contracting HIV/AIDS (MDG6). 16 Official Indicators for MDG3 Household Economy and market Society Ratio of girls’ to boys’ enrollment in primary, secondary, and tertiary education Share of women in wage employment in the nonagricultural sector Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments Ratio of literate females to males among 15–24year-olds 17 Official Indicators for MDG3 Show progress and responsiveness of girls’ school enrollments to gender informed policy interventions (stipends, conditional cash transfers, etc). But gender gaps remain: of the 137 mln. illiterate youths in the world, 63% were female (UNESCO, EFA Global Monitoring Report) The female-to-male literacy ratio was lowest in SSA, MENA, and SA (in 25 countries, fewer than 80 literate women to 100 literate men). In Yemen and Afghanistan – 36 to 100 respectively. 18 Limitations of the Official MDG3 Indicators Partially measure gender equality Do not monitor key elements of gender equality (health outcomes and disparities in access to productive resources such as land, credit, and technology) Inadequate measurement of empowerment National-level indicators can veil inequalities between particular subgroups 19 The unfinished education agenda: Must attend to: Fragile states and countries unlikely to meet the enrollment target—of the 22 countries unlikely to achieve the target even by 2015, 16 countries are in SSA, nine of which are fragile states. Disadvantaged and excluded groups within countries, seen when statistics are disaggregated by income, race, ethnicity, disability and rural-urban residence. Levels of enrollment (especially secondary), not just gender parity ratios. Gender disparities in the transition from one level of education to the next. 20 Official MDG indicators conceal inequalities within countries I. 1. Ratio of girls’ to boys’ enrollment in primary, secondary, and tertiary education – say nothing about educational outcomes (Completion? Getting a job?) Gaps b/w boys and girls completion rates remain high in SSA and SA (90% to 83% and 67% to 57% respectively) Changes in the indicators based on parity ratios are difficult to interpret. (Increases in female-to-male ratios can result from a fall in male rates with female rates remaining constant) Measure the status of women relative to men, rather than whether women are empowered (whether they have the ability to exercise options, choice, and control) 21 Where are the limitations? I 2. Share of women in non/agric. wage employment Is not taking into account the circumstances of each country – such as the share of n/a employment as a percentage of total employment. Is of limited use for low-income countries where wage employment is not a main source of jobs. Does not capture the dimensions of job quality/ability of women to work for pay (economic empowerment) Does not quantify barriers inhibiting women from participating in a LF. Does not capture the ability of women to control their fertility I 3. Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments Political participation is captured only at the national level, not at provincial or local levels, 22 Recommended additional indicators for MDG3** Household Economy and markets Modifications of official MDG indicators Additional indicators Additional indicators Primary completion rate of girls and boys (MDG 2) Percentage of 15to 19-year-old girls who are mothers or pregnant with their first child Labor force participation rates among women and men aged 20-24 and 25-49 Under-five mortality rate for girls and boys (MDG4) **Recommended by the UN Millennium Project Task Force. Percentage of reproductive-age women, and their sexual partners, using modern contraceptives (MDG6) 23 Additional indicators: value added? Meet 3 criteria: 1. 2. 3. data availability (wide country coverage), strong link to poverty reduction, and amenability to policy intervention School completion rate is measured (MDG2), under five mortality (MDG4). A low-cost step forward – just sex-disaggregate the data. Contraceptive prevalence is measured (MDG6), just find % of use of modern contraceptives. 24 Prospective MDG 3 Indicators*** Household Economy and markets Society Test scores, male and female Gender gap in wages Percentage voting by male, female, and ratio Proportion of women who have ever been victims of physical violence by an intimate male partner Share of women in informal wage and selfemployment in nonagricultural employment Proportion of women in the executive branch Percent of employed women who face access to child care Percentage of individuals who possess basic citizenship documents, female, and ratio Business by average size and sex of owner Access to credit for women and men Land ownership by female, male, and jointly held ***data for these indicators are not currently available, but 25 easy to collect. Data needs on gender equality: The proposed complementary indicators do not remedy all the shortcomings of the official MDG3 indicators. Data collection efforts must be scaled up. Inter-agency Expert Group on Gender Statistics was formed in December 2006 by the initiative of UNSD, WB and UNFPA. 3 Task Forces were formed: (TF on VAW, TF on GS training, TF on Time Use Surveys). 26 Instruments: To advance women’s rights, resources, and voice through: Laws Institutions Policies (for example, genderinformed budget) 27 Laws The difference between high and low performer countries in not in the laws themselves, but in the mechanisms to implement them. Formula : institutions to enforce good laws (A) + sex-disaggregated statistics (B) + associated budget allocations (C) Successful gender policies 28 Institutions Most countries now have separate gov-t agencies to promote gender equality, some are elevated to ministerial status (Cambodia Ministry of Women’s Affairs). “National Women’s Machineries” Integration of gender concerns in donor agencies (for example: WB Gender Action Plan 2007-2009, UNDP Gender Plan) Alliances between the gov-t and advocacy organizations, NGOs and civil society 29 Policies Moving beyond gender-targeted interventions to full and sustained gender mainstreaming in the budget process Good practice example: Moldova’s Gender Equality Law of Feb.2006 Specifies the mandates & responsibilities of public institutions with a role of enforcement; Authorizes public budget funding for these agencies; Establishes penalties and reparations for violations of the law. 30 Gender-informed budget tools: Gender-disaggregated beneficiary assessments Public-expenditure benefit incidence analysis Tax incidence analysis Good practice example, Chile: has included gender as a cross-cutting theme in a performance-based national budget, is using incentives (salary bonuses) for public sector staff as a tool to achieve measurable results. 31 Business case for investing in MDG3? Progress toward attaining MDG3 should have multiplier effects and spur progress to other MDGs. There can be significant advancement in gender equality when there is a will. Laws, institutions and policies matter. Gender mainstreaming will work with high level leadership as well as technical and budgetary resources. It is not cost free. 32 Part 2. Gender in the Balkan Countries PRSPs Five Balkan PRSPs (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, FYROM, Montenegro, Serbia) were reviewed to: Examine the degree to which gender issues were included: In the 4 core PRSP elements (diagnosis, public actions, monitoring, and consultative process); In the 8 sectoral areas (health, education, labor markets, agriculture, safety nets, infrastructure, governance and financial services) 33 Rating system Rating system used in the review of core PRSP elements: “0”= no mention of gender issues “1”= brief mention of gender issues “2”= gender issues treated with some elaboration Scores averaged for each core element 34 Average Scores by Core PRSP Component: Core component Diagnosis PRSPs Public Actions 1.2 Monitoring & Evaluation 1.0 Consultative process 0.2 1.2 35 Coverage of Gender Issues in Core Elements of PRSP in the Balkan countries Poverty Diagnostics Priority Sectors and Policy Actions 2 2 1 1 0 0 Albania BiH M acedonia M ontenegro Albania Serbia Monitoring BiH M acedonia M ontenegro Serbia Participatory Process 2 2 1 1 0 0 A l bani a Bi H M ac edoni a M ont enegr o Ser bi a A lbania B iH M acedo nia M o ntenegro Qualitative Rating: 0- No mention of gender, 1 – Brief mention of gender issues, 2 – Gender issues treated with some elaboration Serbia Gender Issues in Core Elements of PRSP by Country in the Balkan region Albania Macedonia (Interim) BiH 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 Poverty Priority Diagnostics Sectors and Public Action M&E Participatory process Poverty Diagnostics Priority Sectors and Public Action M&E Participatory process 0 Poverty Diagnostics Priority Sectors and Public Action Serbia Montenegro 2 2 1 1 0 0 Poverty Diagnostics Priority Sectors and Public Action M&E Participatory process Poverty Diagnostics Priority Sectors and Public Action M&E Participatory process Qualitative Rating: 0- No mention of gender, 1 – Brief mention of gender issues, 2 – Gender issues treated with some elaboration M&E Participatory process Coverage of Gender Issues in Sectoral Areas in the Balkan countries Health, Nutrition and Population Education Serbia Serbia Montenegro Montenegro Macedonia Macedonia BiH BiH Albania Albania 0 1 0 2 1 2 Safety Nets, Agriculture, Gov ernance, Infrastructure, Financial Serv ices and Hum an Trafficking Labor Markets Agriculture Serbia Governance Human trafficking Serbia Montenegro Montenegro Macedonia Macedonia BiH BiH Albania Albania 0 1 2 0 1 Qualitative Rating: 0- No mention of gender, 1 – Brief mention of gender issues, 2 – Gender issues treated with some elaboration 2 Results of the Review: Notable feature: differences in average scores across core elements General problem (not unique to the treatment of gender issues): disconnect and absence of a logical flow from: diagnosis => public actions =>monitoring Public actions : did not correspond to the majority of the problems identified in diagnosis often identified without any plans for monitoring outputs or impacts 39 Western Balkans – specific challenges: Conflict legacy in most of the Balkan countries Political and institutional systems are relatively new. State-building is still underway. Human Rights Violations (refugees, internally displaced persons, Roma) High Rates of Unemployment, especially of the young (BiH, Albania, Macedonia) Grey economy Inadequate Social Assistance System Slow Implementation of Reforms Quality of Education (Albania, Macedonia) Corruption Emigration 40 Western Balkans - specific challenges (2) Data on poverty remains poor and is not gender-disaggregated Poor governance environment Both, government and civil society have faced difficulties in meeting the requirement for a participatory PRSP 41 Trends in Gender Profile of the Balkan Region Female employment as a percent of total number of employed has declined almost twice over the last decade – BiH, Albania, Macedonia, Serbia. Women account for only 35% of the employed in BiH, which is the lowest proportion of women in the total labor force of any country in Southeastern Europe. 42 Trends in Gender Profile of the Balkan Region Gender disparities in access to some parts of the labor market : women are disproportionately represented in lower paying social sector jobs Gender discrimination in employment in both private and public sector (women are the first to be fired during restructuring, fewer opportunities for promotion, wage gaps) (BiH) Low percentage of women in decision-making positions (BiH – 2.4%, Albania) Male depopulation (Albania, Macedonia) due to outmigration of male population 43 Trends in Gender Profile of the Balkan Region Large gender disparities in access to land, capital and credits Maternal mortality decreased over the past decade but still remains high (Albania – 22 per 100,000 live births) Gender disparities at all levels of education enrollment (Albania, Macedonia) Human trafficking (Albania, BiH) 44 “Country Specific” Trends in the Balkan Gender Profiles “Missing young women” in BiH (in the labor market the age group of females from 19-29 with higher education) is very low due to out- migration. (The same trend is increasing in Albania and Macedonia) About 92,000 young people left BiH between January 1996 and March 2001, and surveys show that 62% of the young would emigrate if they had the opportunity. 45 “Country Specific” Trends in the Balkan Gender Profiles In Albania, maternal mortality rate is the highest in SEE (22,7 per 100,000 live births). To compare, in BiH – 5, Montenegro - 2 per 100,000 live births Maternal mortality is even 5-6 times higher in rural areas in Albania than the national average 46 “Country Specific” Trends in the Balkan Gender Profiles Albania has the largest in the Balkans gender gap in: enrollment rates (ratio of girls to boys in primary education – 0.94), literacy (ratio of literate women to men – 90 in urban areas, 87 - in rural), and infant mortality rates (17.4 per 1,000 live births) 47 “Country Specific” Trends in the Balkan Gender Profiles In BiH, the most vulnerable categories of women are: Women refugees, internally displaced persons (IDPs) Single mothers Elderly women Roma women Victims of violence Uneducated and unemployed women Women in returnee households (the worst position of all) 48 Balkan Countries PRSPs: Gender-Sensitive? The major problem: gender is not addressed as a cross-cutting issue in PRSPs (except BiH), rather the discussion of gender is isolated to some specific sectors In most cases, PRSP emphasizes market economy (paid labor/male dominated) at the expense of the HH economy (unpaid labor/female dominated). 49 Balkan Countries PRSPs: Gender-Sensitive? Problems with household survey data: Unitary household model (only BiH and Albania used LSMS) Unawareness of sectoral gender issues (e.g. transportation, infrastructure, etc.) Lack of gender-focused questions In some cases, the analysis does not take a note of the factors that cause change in HH structures to female/male headed HH (except BiH), and their implications for stability and sustenance of families. 50 Balkan Countries PRSPs: Gender-Sensitive? In most cases, the discussion on education does not incorporate analysis of underlying factors that contribute to non-enrollment, poor performance, and dropouts of boys and girls: government withdrawal of resources from the sectors, low quality of teaching, prioritization of boys’ education in some countries (Albania, Macedonia), use of girls labor for domestic purposes, lack of adequate facilities (BiH), drop-out of boys for economic assistance to their families (Albania) 51 Learning by doing: In the Balkan countries, a process of consultation amongst government bodies is a new way of working. Pre-existing government processes are usually hierarchical, while horizontal links are weak. The PRSP process both reveals this weakness and provides an opportunity to strengthen this link PRSP formulation led to the creation of a number of thematic or sectoral working groups (for ex., BiH -20; Serbia -7) 52 Bosnia & Herzegovina PRSP BiH PRSP (2004-2007) - number of reforms to reduce poverty, including implementation of the BiH Law on Gender Equality, which is expected to lessen the gender effect on poverty level. 53 BiH PRSP -Special section on Gender and Poverty issues It analyses: The impact of poverty on men and women The most vulnerable categories of poor women (single Gender discrimination at the labor market (females have higher risk of unemployment – 35% of total employed); Gender wage gaps; Implementation of the Gender Equality Law; Gender Specific Action Plan. mothers, elderly women, women refugees, Roma women, victims of violence, uneducated or unemployed women, women in returnee households, and women in rural areas); 54 BiH PRSP concludes: o Poverty cannot be measured purely on the basis of income indicators : men and women are affected in different ways by other aspects of poverty. 55 BiH PRSP Labor Market: o female –headed HH are exposed to higher risks of falling into the category of the poor than male - headed HH o Women receive lower wages than men for the same work and they have fewer opportunities for promotion. o Lack of child-care institutions tends to be a barrier to women’s employment in BiH. 56 Good Practice Examples: Bosnia & Herzegovina PRSP Education: o Gender differences at all levels of education: primary education is more accessible to boys. Decision-making: o Participation of women in the executive authorities is very low – 2.4% 57 Gender-Related Policies in BiH PRSP Labor Market Education Prevent discrimination in the areas of labor and employment Include gender component in the educational and curriculum reform Strengthen micro-credit institutions to stimulate employment among women Support development of postgraduate studies in the area of gender Health Improve women’s health by decreasing maternal mortality rates Governance Human Trafficking Agriculture Increase the percentage of women MPs Implement BiH Action Plan for Prevention of Human Trafficking Improve the situation of women in rural areas Enlarge women’s participation in the executive authorities Adopt guidelines on special protection of minors (as part of the Action Plan) Implement principles of gender equality in rural areas Implement CEDAW Employ more women in the State Border Service (DGS) Support women in access to credit and representation in rural institutions 58 BiH PRSP: Description of participatory process Combination of top-down to bottom-up approach Inter-sectoral; intra-sectoral and national participation BiH Council of Ministers played a leading role Local authorities played an active role Civil society: private sector, trade unions, Parliament, national NGOs, youth, scholars, and experts . 59 BiH PRSP: M&E With the assistance of UNDP, BiH PRSP was able to incorporate the MDGs and indicators adapted to BiH, into the PRSP monitoring mechanism. Thus, indicators monitoring gender equality, women’s health and women’s social inclusion were incorporated into the set of indicators monitoring PRSP objectives. 60 Policy Matrix Bosnia & Herzegovina PRSP Labor Market and Employment Health Governance Policy Action: strengthening microcredit institutions Policy action: Promote safe motherhood and essential care for the newborn Policy action: Provide appropriate gender representation of the civil servants Indicator: Increase in women’s employment in private enterprises in regions. Indicators: Lower maternal mortality, infant under 5 mortality rates; increase in number of mothers using maternal and post natal services, number of IDPs visiting quality services. Indicator: Increase in women’s participation in the executive authorities and the number of MPs 61 BiH PRSP Overall, there is already official recognition in BiH that poverty affects men and women differently and the policies have to take into account these differences. Great efforts have been made to ensure that gender issues are reflected in the priorities of the PRSP. 62 Potential Opportunities Gender-disaggregated data should be addressed as a priority in order to enhance the development of gender sensitive PRSPs and MDGs Unless these specific impacts on the lives of women and men are analyzed, understood and captured fully by all poverty interventions, it would be very difficult to tackle poverty. 63 References Global Monitoring Report: Confronting the Challenges of Gender Equality and Fragile States, World Bank, 2007. Albania: Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper—Annual Progress Report. Ministry of Finance, 2006. Mid-Term Development Strategy of Bosnia and Herzegovina (PRSP) 2004-2007. Council of Ministers of BiH, Government of Federation of BiH, 2004. Macedonia: Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper. Government of the Republic of Macedonia, 2000. First Progress Report on the Implementation of the Poverty Reduction Strategy in Serbia, Government of the Republic of Serbia, 2005. Montenegro: First Progress Report. Government of the Republic of Montenegro, Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare, 2005. 64