Hillary Clinton World Bank
I celebrate this. But I am not satisfied. Because despite the increased visibility of women in development policy, the central role of gender equality in economic development is under-appreciated or misunderstood.
It’s been almost two decades since Larry Summers (then World Bank chief economist) first made the case for the link between women’s empowerment and economic prosperity, but the Millennium Development Goals adopted by the international community in 2000 do a poor job of incentivizing investment in women. As this excellent brief from UN Women points out, gender equality is defined too narrowly (too often reduced to being simply about girls’ schools), and lacks the formal targets the MDGs set for progress in other areas like food security or public health. [It's also worth noting that it took 15 years of lobbying by activists to get the UN to establish UN Women last summer. For 60 years before that, gender issues at the UN were handled ad hoc, as subsets of other departments.]
But perhaps most disconcerting is that many of the resources invested in gender equality aren’t having the desired impact of improving women’s lives. Women hold just 1% of the world’s property, occupy less than 20% of the world’s legislative seats, make 66% of the male counterparts’ income or just 10% of the world’s income, are more likely than men to fall into poverty and often struggle twice as hard to emerge from it.
Because of the way that gender equality sits at the nexus of cultural transformation and economic advancement, it can be a sensitive issue for development organizations to handle. Some shy away from it, for fear of offending local traditions. Others double down, but fail to listen to women in the developing world, giving them help they didn’t ask for as opposed to the kind of help they say they need. Together, as William Easterly has noted, these tendencies create all kinds of structural sexism in the development world that having more women at the top won’t instantly correct.
It is important to have women in positions of power, because it raises the ambitions of young women and girls, but what really matters is that those in power, male and female, be feminists. I’m still waiting for the day when that’s true across the board.
Source: Reuters