Women’s Empowerment and Foreign Aid Effectiveness
Abstract
The longstanding debate on whether foreign aid promotes development suggests that aid’s efficacy depends on conditions in recipient states. Advocates of gender equality argue that empowering women is desirable not only in its own right but also as a means to other sought-after outcomes. We bring together these issues and argue that women’s empowerment in aid-receiving countries should enhance the effect of foreign aid on child development outcomes. We find support for this argument in analyses of up to 107 developing countries from 1986-2010. Our results indicate that aid is associated with greater reductions in infant mortality where women are more empowered. Furthermore, we find that among the different dimensions of empowerment—political, economic and social—political participation has the strongest and most consistent mediating effect on foreign aid. Our work has implications for research on aid effectiveness, the consequences of gender equality, and the politics of presence.
Link to web site
https://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1702/1702130_2018_6_montinola_prince.pdf
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Date
2018-10Author
Montinola, Gabriella R.
Prince, Sarah M.
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2018:6
Language
eng