Women Legislators in Africa and Foreign Aid
There has been a significant rise in the share of women legislators in Africa. What makes this fact puzzling is that it cannot be attributed to an African electorate that values gender equality and having women in political leadership positions. In stark contrast to this, gender equality and women’s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The World Bank Economic Review 2023-01 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | There has been a significant rise in
the share of women legislators in Africa. What makes this
fact puzzling is that it cannot be attributed to an African
electorate that values gender equality and having women in
political leadership positions. In stark contrast to this,
gender equality and women’s empowerment have successively
moved up in the priority list of the international donor
community over the last two decades. This raises the
question of whether there is a relationship between women
legislators in Africa and foreign-aid allocations. This
study finds a strong and statistically robust relationship:
an increase in the share of women legislators from 15 to 20
percent is associated with an increase of about 4 percent in
aid conditional on current levels of aid. Additionally, the
study finds that democratic countries receive more aid but
does not find an interaction effect between democracy and
the share of women legislators, which suggests that donors
do not tailor their gender selective aid towards more
democratic countries. The results provide evidence in
support of aid selectivity for policies that improve gender
equality in aid-recipient countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. |
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