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What do we know about gender and private sector development in Africa? Markus Goldstein Alaka Holla The World Bank.

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Presentation on theme: "What do we know about gender and private sector development in Africa? Markus Goldstein Alaka Holla The World Bank."— Presentation transcript:

1 What do we know about gender and private sector development in Africa? Markus Goldstein Alaka Holla The World Bank

2 Very little What we do know – Descriptive statistics Can tell us about existence of gaps But often mostly limited to formal sector (Enterprise Surveys) Cannot tell us welfare implications of closing gaps – Impact evaluations in small enterprise finance Will present some evidence today

3 What we know less about – Effectiveness of BDS for women entrepreneurs – Effects on enterprise outcomes (by gender) – Spillovers to non-enterprise outcomes and total welfare effects – What policy interventions can close gaps? Is it desirable to do so?

4 Outline 1.Basic descriptive statistics 2.Evidence from impact evaluations in small business finance i.Credit: access and take-up ii.Investment and income responses iii.Impacts within the household 3.Lessons for future impact evaluations

5 Outline 1.Basic descriptive statistics 2.Evidence from impact evaluations in small business finance i.Credit: access and take-up ii.Investment and income responses iii.Impacts within the household 3.Lessons for future impact evaluations

6 Women are less likely to be enterprise owners (all firms)

7 Relative to men’s, women’s enterprises are more likely to be family businesses

8 But reported constraints and productivity are similar No discernible gender pattern in reported constraints – Anticompetitive and informal practices, corruption, access to finance, labor regulation, tax administration Similar productivity performance – Value-added per worker – Total factor productivity (Bardasi, Blackden & Guzman 2007)

9 Outline 1.Basic descriptive statistics 2.Evidence from impact evaluations in small business finance i.Credit: access and take-up ii.Investment and income responses iii.Impacts within the household 3.Lessons for future impact evaluations

10 Interventions in small business finance If access to finance is a barrier to growth, improving access to finance should improve enterprise outcomes Randomized interventions with evaluations help us move beyond reported constraints and correlations Given that business and personal finances often intertwined, there could also be spillovers to household outcomes. Main question of interest: Are the impacts of these interventions different for men and women?

11 What do we mean by different? We are testing whether the hypothesis there is no gender difference in impact is true – In jargon: the gender difference is not statistically distinguishable from zero at standard confidence levels Two ways this hypothesis could be true: 1.We can’t tell. Our estimates are so noisy as to be indistinguishable  NO information for policy 2.The difference is a well estimated zero  policy relevant result How can we know if we are in situation 1 or 2? – Inverse power calculations: tell us the smallest possible gender difference we could have distinguished from zero

12 The interventions – Kenya (Dupas and Robinson) interest-free savings accounts in village banks for men and women (small entrepreneurs) w/ penalty for withdrawal, plus opportunity to become Bank members and thus get loans Randomly assigned individuals to receive account or not Use surveys, administrative data, and daily log books

13 The interventions – Malawi (Gine, Goldberg, and Yang) Looks at how borrowers respond to the lender having better information on their credit record Randomly assigned paprika farmers clubs applying for a loan to control group or one where members were fingerprinted as part of the application Data collection included administrative records and household socioeconomic surveys

14 The interventions -- South Africa (Karlan, Zinman, and others) Worked with big consumer lender in SA that provides loans to small businesses Evaluations cover a range of different randomized interventions: 1.Manipulating content in loan advertisements mailed out to former borrowers (loan terms, selling points in advertisement) 2.Varying the interest rates offered to loan applicants and the final interest rate that applies to their loans 3.Extending credit to marginally ineligible applicants Use administrative and household survey data

15 The outcomes Impact evaluations measured multiple outcomes For some interventions, possible to track outcomes in 3 different domains: – Credit access, take-up, and default rates – Business investment and income responses – Household expenditure and health Can get a broad picture of impact

16 Savings accounts in Kenya OutcomeImpact for women Gender difference in impact Smallest detectable difference Credit and borrowing ROSCA contributio ns 18.33-17.94 |23.23| Income & investment Business investment 252.89-152.83|420.97| HouseholdFood expenditure 24.13-16.24 |26.24| Numbers in red = statistically significant

17 Fingerprinting borrowers in Malawi OutcomeImpact for women Gender difference in impact Smallest detectable difference Credit and borrowing Loan size 309.27-1253.14 |1190.32| Income & investment Market sales 32248.16-29698.637 |39629.29| Profits 97690.57-98806.78 |96649.46| Numbers in red = statistically significant

18 South Africa: Content of loan advertisements InterventionOutcomeImpact for women Gender difference in impact Smallest detectable difference Credit and borrowing Offered interest rates Apply for loan -0.0030.0002|0.002| Default 0.034-0.039 |0.033| Longer deadline to apply Apply for loan 0.076-0.020 |0.024| Numbers in red = statistically significant

19 South Africa: Extending credit to marginally ineligible applicants OutcomeImpact for men Gender difference in impact Smallest detectable difference HouseholdDepression -1.181.53 |1.40| OutcomeImpact for women Impact for menStatistically distinguishable? Credit and borrowing Have micro loan 0.1290.119 No Have loan from formal source -0.0830.008 No HouseholdFood consumption -0.0230.232 No Control and outlook 0.1590.196 No

20 Some common patterns Aside from mental health, the limited evidence we have sometimes points to closing of gender gaps (if it is significant) – None of these interventions were explicitly designed as “pro-women” Ok – so should we go ahead and scale-up these interventions? – Hold on – We need more evidence

21 Outline 1.Basic descriptive statistics 2.Evidence from impact evaluations in small business finance i.Credit: access and take-up ii.Investment and income responses iii.Impacts within the household 3.Lessons for future impact evaluations

22 We need more and better evidence Many gender differences not statistically significant – Could be large or small – we cannot say with a lot of confidence But if we had the right sample size, well estimated zero results would be informative – If the policy is aimed at a documented gender gap, it has failed to address it – If the policy is not aimed at a gender gap, men and women are affected equally

23 So what are the problems now?  Many IEs already done did not collect enough observations to tell  A well estimated zero is often not reported in publications (publication bias)  Gender analysis isn’t always done

24 We need more and better evidence Not even clear how significant results would extend to other areas within countries and across countries – Program participants not randomly selected from population – How does context matter? Location Sectors Scale of enterprise  Need to test these interventions in different contexts

25 How to get to more evidence The way to better policy is impact evaluations that are well designed to capture gender differences This does not mean (only) projects targeted at women – this is a small fraction of what we do It means understanding gender-differential effects in the important projects (e.g. large budget, pressing issue, innovative design)

26 What do better evaluations look like? Start from an understanding of what existing gender issues are in your target population Think about causal chain of the project and how it might be different for men and women and then choose outcomes of interest accordingly Make sure the data is sufficient for this, and that the analysis gets done

27 And the good news… There is some promising work in the pipeline and you will hear about some of it this week But this is only a (small) start As you design your impact evaluations – think about how your program may have different effects by gender and how you could measure this!

28 Thank you Merci Obrigado


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