Title: Gender and MicroFinance
1Gender and Micro-Finance
- A briefing for Oglethorpe University
- Lectures on Microfinance
- Astrid Pregel President Feminomics Inc.
- February 28, 2008
2The Concept of Gender
- Sex refers to immutable biological
characteristics of men and women - Gender refers to the social and cultural roles
that denote acceptable behavior and that are
created for us by our families and culture
3Sex vs. Gender
- SEX
- Biological determined at birth
- Universal
- same all over the world
- Immutable
- does not change with time
- GENDER
- Social
- we learn it
- Not Universal
- Regional differences
- Mutable
- Can change with time
4Gender Stereotypes
- Stereotypes help us organize our complex world
- Life would be chaotic if we started each human
encounter with no information - Stereotypes, biases, schemas are largely
unconscious, considered natural and shared by
men and women
5Natural Gender Roles
- Women are born to nurture
- Men are born to lead
- Women have an affinity to take care of domestic
matters - Men are suited to work outside the home
- Women make small music
6Micro-finance and Gender or Women?
- It is women we will talk about today
- but
- It is understanding womens and mens gender
roles and their limitations that are key to
understanding poverty and the problems in
international development assistance
7State of the Worlds Women
- 70 of the worlds poor are women and girls
- Women produce 80 of the worlds food and own
less than 10 of the land - No country in the world has achieved gender
equality (US in 23rd position) (Davos Gender Gap
Study)
8Women and the Economy(Remember Women stay home
and take care of the house, men earn a living
outside the home)
- Since the 70s women have taken 2 out of every 3
jobs in the world - Women produce 40 of the worlds measurable
economy - Women represent well over 50 of the informal
economy - Women work on average 35 more hours per week
than men - Womens earnings are 2/3 of mens globally
including in the USA (where 1.3 women graduate
for every male and the wage gap grows with
education level)
9Microfinance Micro Profits
- Women small business owners are a growing force
globally - Women own between 25 35 of firms registered
around the world - USA women own 43 of all firms
- Women micro-entrepreneurs dominate the informal
economy - Large unexploited potential globally to grow
womens businesses
10Poverty Parameters
- Extreme Poverty
- 1.1 billion people live on less than 1 a day
- Moderate Poverty
- 2.7 billion people live on less than 2 a day
- Middle Income
- 1. 7 billion people
- Wealthy level
- 1 billion people
- Total population 6.5 billion
11Microfinance Parameters
- 133 million extreme and moderately poor MFI
clients reached in 2006 - Of these 92 million are extremely poor
(controversial) - 79 million of extremely poor are women
- Microfinance growing at 30/year
- www.microcreditsummit2007.0rg
12Why Mohammad Yunis Wont Lend to Men
- When a women controls her earnings the benefits
to her family are as high as 20 times greater
than when income is controlled by her husband - Children studied in Kenya were 25 taller when
their mothers controlled the income - Childrens education participation and family
health improves when mothers earn income - Children studied in Ethiopia whose mothers were
in MFI projects had half the malnutrition levels
of a control group
13The Two Truths
- Truth 1
- Women are central to economic growth
- Truth 2
- Women are THE key to the alleviation of
poverty - Truth 3
- Microfinance connects these two truths in
promising ways
14Microfinance a Solution to Poverty?
- 3.8 billion or nearly 2/3 of the world population
is living in poverty
- Microfinance presently serving at the outside 150
million poor
15Commercialization of Microfinance
- Traditionally Microfinance has been the domain of
the non profit world and bilateral and
international aid agencies - Over the past three years a growing and
accelerating trend where commercial funds are
being channeled into MFIs
16Microfinance Hybrids
- Socially oriented MFIs
- Focus on the poorest
- Provide other social services
- Group lending and savings
- Interested in social as well as financial returns
- Commercially oriented MFIs
- Interested in financial returns primarily
- Some interest in serving poor
- Few are tracking data on women clients
17Implications of Commercialization
- Pressure to produce good financial returns
- Pressure to increase the numbers of clients
quickly - Pressure to move to individual lending models
instead of circles - Pressure to move to collateral based lending
- Pressure to lend to men?
18Commercialization Impact on Women
- Decreasing percentage of women loan officers and
very few women in leadership roles in MFIs - Global efforts to expand financial services for
the poor through MFIs not focused on women and
what they need in particular - Women have less education, skills and time
therefore support services provided by socially
oriented models is critical to their success - Lending circle provide important avenues for
women to learn about agency and empowerment which
disappears with commercial model
19State of Microfinance for Women
- Robust evidence that microfinance leads to
economic and social improvements for women - Little evidence however that microfinance moves
people out of poverty permanently - Little evidence of significant social and
cultural change resulting from microfinance
20Practical Needs vs. Strategic Needs
- Practical Daily Needs for Women
- Food, water, safe environment
- Education for children
- Health for self and children
- Role in family decision making
- Ability to influence family spending
- Ability to feel comfortable in society
21Practical Needs vs. Strategic Needs
- Strategic Gender Needs
- Coercive gender labor division
- Unequal access to productive resources such as
land, capital, extension services - Domestic violence
- Womens control over their own bodies
- Political influence and equality
- Sexual exploitation
22Benefits of Microfinance
- Practical Needs
- Extremely poor women likely pre-occupied with
obtaining the practical daily needs for herself
and her family - Micro finance appears to have a significant
positive impact at this level
23Benefits of MicrofinanceStrategic Gender Needs
- Coercive division of labor
- Access to resources
- Domestic Violence
- Womens Control over their bodies
- Political influence
- Sexual exploitation
- Limited change
- No impact
- Contradictory evidence
- More robust evidence
- Some evidence but limited to local
- little evidence
24Gender Equality A Distant Goal?
- No country in the world has achieved true parity
between men and women - The USA ranks 23rd in the world mainly held back
by womens lack of political representation(66th
place) - Sweden in first place and still has more to
achieve
25Four Pillars of Swedens Gender Equality Policy
- Equal distribution of power and influence. Same
rights and opportunities to be active citizens
and to shape the conditions for decision making - Economic Equality between men and women. Men and
women shall have the same opportunities and
conditions with regard to education and paid work
that provide life long economic independence - An equal distribution of unpaid care and
household work. Women and men shall take the same
responsibility for household work and have the
same opportunities to give and receive care on
equal terms - Mens violence against women shall come to an
end. Women and men, girls and boys shall have
equal rights and opportunities to physical
integrity
26Gender and Microfinance Major Issues
- More research needed too much anecdotal evidence
- Practical daily needs must anchor longer term,
durable gender outcomes - Commercialization trend while exciting is also
worrisome for women clients of MF - Absence of women from leadership and as loan
officers is a problem - Connection between microfinance and small
business needs strengthening