Title: Gender Inequality and Womens Empowerment
1Gender Inequality and Womens Empowerment
2005-06 National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3)
2Why Measure Gender Inequality and Womens
Empowerment in NFHS-3?
- Important public health consequences for women
and children - Strategic theme of NPP 2000
- Theme Empowering women for improved health and
nutrition - Millennium Development Goals 3 4
- MDG3 Promote gender equality and empower women
- MDG4 Eliminate gender disparity in education
3Why Measure Gender Inequality and Womens
Empowerment in NFHS-3?
- MDG 4 Eliminate gender disparity in primary and
secondary education preferably by 2005, and at
all levels by 2015 - Four specific indicators
- Ratio of girls to boys in primary, secondary, and
tertiary education - Ratio of literate women to men 15-24 years old
- Share of women in wage employment in the
non-agricultural sector - Proportion of seats held by women in national
parliaments
4Content of Presentation
- Selected indicators of gender disparity
- Access and control over resources
- Womens decision making role
- Freedom of movement
- Acceptance of gender unequal norms
5Gender Disparity in Literacy
6Gender Disparity in Higher Secondary School
Completion
7Gender Disparity in Media Exposure
- Not only are fewer women than men literate but
fewer are also regularly exposed to media - Percentage of men and women age 15-19 regularly
exposed to print media, TV, radio, or cinema - Men 88
- Women 71
- Gender Disparity 19
8Employment Another Area of Gender Disparity
Percent
- Among the population age 15-49
- Men are 2 times as likely to be employed
- Men are 2.7 times as likely to be employed for
cash - Among the employed, 64 of women vs. 91 of men
earn cash - Female share of population employed for cash in
non-agricultural occupations is 22
9The majority of employed women are engaged in
agricultural work
10Does employment empower women financially?
- NFHS-3 asked married employed women and men who
controlled their own earnings and who controlled
the spouses earnings (if relevant) - 20 of employed married women said they earned at
least as much as their husband - 24 of men with an employed wife said that their
wife earned at least as much as them
11Control over Womens Earnings as Reported by
Currently Married Women and Men
Percent
Womens report about their own earnings
Mens report about their wifes earnings
Mainly husband
Husband wife jointly
Mainly wife
12Are some women more likely than others to NOT
participate in the use of their earnings?
Percent of currently married women
Residence
Age
Wealth Index
Education
13Do married women have access to any other
financial resources?
Percentage of women who
14Education, employment, or wealth do not ensure
that women have money that they control
Percentage of women age 15-49 who have money
which they can decide how to use
15Do married women participate in other household
decision making?
16- Older women are much more likely than younger
women to participate in household decisions - Differentials by other characteristics are small
- However, less than half of even the oldest,
urban, more educated, employed or wealthier women
participate in all four decisions
17What are some of the other hurdles that prevent
women from attaining gender equality?
- Limited freedom of movement
- Gender norms that promote mens control over
women. NFHS-3 asked women and men questions about
norms regarding - Wife beating
- A husbands right to have sex with his wife
irrespective of his wifes wishes
18Percentage of women age 15-49 who are allowed to
go alone to
The majority of women have little freedom of
movement. Only one-third go alone to all three
destinations the market, health facility and
outside the village or community.
19Percentage who agree that a husband is justified
in hitting or beating his wife if she
20Although urban, educated, employed and wealthier
persons are less likely to agree with wife
beating, these characteristics are not sufficient
to supplant beliefs in gender inegalitarian norms
21Attitude towards refusing sex with husband by
Situation, Women and Men
Percentage who agree that a wife is justified in
refusing to have sex with her husband when she
22Percentage of men age 15-49 who consider that,
when a woman refuses to have sex with him when he
wants, he has the right to
- Get angry and reprimand her - 20
- Refuse her financial support - 6
- Use force to have sex - 6
- Have sex with another woman - 4
23Key Findings
- Women are disadvantaged absolutely and relative
to men in terms of access to education, media
exposure, and employment for cash. - The majority of married women do not have the
final say on the use of their own earnings or all
other household decisions asked about. - Traditional gender norms, particularly those
concerning wife beating, remain strongly
entrenched.
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