Title: MENA Women in the Economy Rabat, December 8-9, 2005
1MENA Women in the EconomyRabat, December 8-9,
2005
- Nadereh Chamlou
- Senior Advisor to the Chief Economist
- Economic and Sector Work
- The Middle East and North Africa Region
2Definitions
- Millennium Development Goal 3
- Gender Equality and Womens Empowerment, measured
by - Educational attainment
- Formal labor force participation
- Political representation
- Difference between Sex and Gender
- Gender Equality
- Equal access to opportunity
- Equal voice
- Equal treatment under the law
3Why is Gender important?
- Low growth has led to low employment generation
particularly among the young - Significant evidence that gender inequity and
inequality impacts growth - Gender inequality is the most pervasive type of
inequality which cuts across all other categories
of inequality impacts development most deeply
4 5 increasingly, talent pool equal among sexes
6Extensive investment in social indicatorsbecause
of shortfall in empowerment indicators
7Womens formal labor force participation lowest
among all regions
8Women remain an untapped resource
9Characteristics of women in the labor market
10Characteristics of women in the labor market
11Why? Differential Treatment under the Law
- Unequal rights and powers in the private sphere
- Unequal access to public sphere as interaction
with state may be mediated through a male kin - Centrality of the family
- Concept of male breadwinner
- Concept of equity rather equality defined roles
- Code of modesty - Protection of womens honor
12Gender-based Legal Framework in MENA
- CEDAW (passed by all but Iran, albeit with
reservations mainly in areas relating to
inheritance, family law) - Constitution (guarantees equal rights for all
citizens) - However, ordinary legislation is discriminatory
- Personal Status Code based on Sharia (marriage,
divorce, custody, inheritance) - Civil Status Code based on Western Legal Models
(labor, nationality, pensions, etc)
13Example of Differential Treatment
- Labor laws and regulations
-
- Limitations on hours and type of work so as to
protect women - Mobility laws restricting womens travel within
and outside the country - Social benefits denominated in terms of number of
female employees (such as on-sight child-care) - Permission of husband to work or freedom of
movement - ? These increase the implicit and explicit cost
of women employees
14The Effect of Differential Sex-based Treatment
under the Law Example Implicit cost can
function like a sex-based minimum wage
- A minimum wage is imposed for men. This divides
the labor market into two segments. - Employment in the Covered Market with decline ---
employment in the Uncovered Market will rise
(assuming that men and women are perfect
substitutes.) - Upward sloping female labor supply curve raises
wages to minimum wage level. Results in
decline in employment and the use of other
factors of production, such as capital and
energy. Increase, causing a leftward shift of the
demand curve for male labor (form D0 to D1). - Total employment declines.
- Source The Economics of Gender (Joyce Jacobson)
15Female labor force participation and higher
overall employment
Empirical evidence does not support the claim
that womens increased labor force participation
increases unemployment
16Consequences of womens low economic
participation to family and economy
- Cost to the family
- Egypt 25, Jordan 20, Morocco 17
- Womens work is increasingly the ticket between
poverty and middle class - It is also an important source of income for
expenditures on better education and health of
next generation
- Cost to the economy
- For a subset of countries, GDP could have been
2.6 instead of 1.9 with greater female
participation in labor force. - Translates into billions of dollars of lost
opportunity and development for the region.
17Why gender issues are important for MENA now?
- Need to create 100 million jobs economies have
to be more market oriented - Well functioning markets depend on a level
playing field for all players - Women constitute a large proportion of the work
force essential for competitiveness - Women entrepreneurs essential contributors to
innovation and investment - Gender based discrimination -- invisible brain
drain - Information technology changes meaning of
geography, networks, production methods push
for more knowledge content which opens up new
opportunities for new players
18Agenda for Workshop
- Focus on Womens Economic Rights and
Opportunities - consistent with religion, tradition, human needs
- Three entry points
- Public Policy
- Employment
- Entrepreneurship
19Conclusion
- Gender is no for the sake of women but for
welfare of society - MENA countries will undergo vast reforms --focus
on economic rights to remove discrimination - It is important to ensure the engender reform
agenda - Create level playing field for all
- What is the magnitude of the problem and how does
it affect the effects that existing, or
persistent, gender inequalities will have on the
outcomes and the success of economic policies
and - the specific actions that are needed to mitigate
gender based barriersthe level of resources that
are needed and who is best placed to act on them,
be it the government, NGOs, and the civil
society.