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Do Gender Quotas Influence Women’s Representation and Policies? November, 2009 Li-Ju Chen.

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Presentation on theme: "Do Gender Quotas Influence Women’s Representation and Policies? November, 2009 Li-Ju Chen."— Presentation transcript:

1 Do Gender Quotas Influence Women’s Representation and Policies? November, 2009 Li-Ju Chen

2 2 Outline 1. Motivation 2. Background - What are quotas? - The world of quotas 3. Empirical strategy and data 4. Results 5. Robustness check 6. Summary

3 3 1. Motivation Average Proportion of Women in National Parliaments (%) Single House or lower House Nordic countries41.4 Americas20.7 Europe-OSCE member countries Excluding Nordic countries 19.0 Sub-Saharan Africa17.3 Asia16.9 Pacific12.9 Arab States9.6 Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), March 2008

4 4 Women in National Parliaments (%) RankCountrySingle House or lower House RankCountrySingle House or lower House 1Rwanda48.811Belgium35.3 2Sweden47.012Mozambique34.8 3Finland*41.513Iceland33.3 4Argentina40.014New Zealand33.1 5Netherlands39.315South Africa33.0 6Denmark*38.016Austria32.8 7Costa Rica36.817Germany31.6 8Spain36.618Uganda30.7 9Norway36.119Burundi30.5 10Cuba*36.020United Republic of Tanzania 30.4 Source: IPU, March 2008

5 5 Quota systems therefore aim at ensuring that women constitute a certain number or percentage of the members of a body, whether it is a candidate list, a parliamentary assembly, a committee, or a government. Why introduce gender quotas? -The core idea is to recruit women into political positions and to ensure that women are not isolated in political life. -To incorporate women's concerns in decision-making would improve the nature of the public sphere. -Women's representation can also have an indirect influence by increasing men's attention to women and children policies.

6 6 -Pande (2003) and Chattopadhyay and Duflo (2004). Theoretically, if the candidates could not commit to implement specific policies once elected, the identity of the legislator matters for policy determination. This influence in policy increases as there is increasing political representation of a group. -Besley and Coate (1997) and Osborne and Slivinski (1996) Empirically, the studies focus on the effect of political reservations on policy outcomes in the cases of individual country. Do quotas work as well in general?

7 7 1.The fraction of female legislators in countries after adopting gender quotas is 5.03 percentage points higher than that in countries without any type of gender quotas. 2.Counties after applying gender quotas give the weight of government expenditure on social welfare 3.83 percentage points higher than those countries without gender quotas on average. 3.An increase in the share of female legislators by one percentage point increases 0.67 percentage points the ratio of government expenditure on social welfare to GDP. Main findings:

8 8 2.Background – what are quotas? Quotas for women are a form of affirmative action to help them overcome the obstacles that prevent them from entering politics in the same way as their male colleagues. -Voluntary party quotas -Legal gender quotas adopted voluntarily by political parties, which are set by the parties themselves to guarantee the nomination of a certain number or proportion of women. mandated either by the constitution or by the electoral law, obliging all political entities participating in elections to apply them equally. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance

9 9 2.Background – the world of quotas Dahlerup (2006) defines two different tracks to equal political representation for women and men -The incremental track -The fast track rests on a gradual increase in women's overall resources and on gradual historical changes in the perceptions of womanhood. represents a historical leap forward in women's representation in parliaments.

10 10 2.Background – the world of quotas -The incremental track 1.Nordic countries: 2.Western Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand: -Quotas were not introduced among these countries until women had already reached about 25% of the seats in 1980s. -No legal quotas in Nordic countries force all political parties to nominate a certain minimum of women on their lists. -Only some political parties and today only in Norway, Iceland and Sweden have quotas for public election. -Political parties and national legislatures across the region have taken steps over the last 20 years to promote women's access to political office through party quotas and legal quotas. -There are only two countries with legal quotas

11 11 2.Background – the world of quotas -The fast track 3.The Beijing Platform in 1995 has been very influential, and women's movements all over the world have attempted to give the controversial demand for gender quotas legitimacy by referring to the Platform for Action. 2.In 1990 the UN Economic and Social Council endorsed a target of 30% women in decision-making positions in the world by 1995. However, only 10% of the world's parliaments are women in 1995. 1.In line with this conception of women's under-representation, mandated quotas for the recruitment and election of female candidates are needed. 4.Examples: Latin America, African countries

12 12 -Empirical Strategy Gender quotas time 3.Empirical strategy and data

13 13 -Data covers 103 countries between 1970 and 2006 22 countries with legal gender quotas 47 countries with voluntary party quotas 43 countries without any type of gender quotas gender quotas: International IDEA female legislators: IPU policy outcomes: Government Finance Statistics (GFS) Yearbook issued by IMF 3.Empirical strategy and data

14 14 Source: Government Finance Statistics Manual 2001

15 15 4.Results – mean level of female legislators (%) Note: standard errors in parentheses.

16 4. Result – Reduced form effect

17 17 Note: standard errors in parentheses. 4. Result – IV approach

18 18 5.Robustness check - Does civil war matter? Control for War Exclude African countries / Exclude Latin American countries

19 19 5.Robustness check - Do OECD countries drive the results? Note: standard errors in parentheses.

20 20 Note: standard errors in parentheses.

21 21 5.Robustness check - Do trends matter? 1.To reduce the risk of biased estimates resulted from different timing background, I contain only countries with the beginning year before 1980 and the ending year after 2000. 2.T wo more observations around the year 1985 and the year 1995 for each country to capture the trend of policy outcomes and women’s representation in politics. time 1973.4198519952003.6

22 22 5.Robustness check - Do trends matter? A finer set of sample countries and two more observations The panel dataset covers 49 countries 12 countries w/ legal gender quotas 29 countries w/ voluntary party quotas 15 countries w/o any type of gender quotas

23 23 5.Robustness check - Do trends matter? Note: standard errors in parentheses.

24 24 5.Robustness check - Do trends matter? Note: standard errors in parentheses.

25 25 6.Conclusion The contribution of this study is to investigate the political reservation effect for women on cross-country data. Gender quotas may influence the types of policy outcomes through its effect on the proportion of female legislators. The increasing representation of women in politics raises the influence on government spending decisions, especially those issues related to women's traditional role in family, i.e. social welfare. Keep tracking the data would facilitate investigation of the effect of women in politics on policy outcomes because female legislators in countries with the fast track of gender equality may not yield their effect on policy decision making yet.


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