Women and Economic Growth

  • Education
    Investing in Girls’ STEM Education
    New technologies are dramatically transforming work and the global economy every day. Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers hold tremendous promise for millions of girls and women—but only if new policies tackle access and education problems first.  
  • Election 2020
    9 Female Leaders Gaining Notice
    Play
    There are currently 23 female world leaders worldwide. From Estonia's Kersti Kaljulaid to Ethiopia's Sahle-Work Zewde. Here are 9 female leaders gaining notice. Which country will be next?
  • Women and Economic Growth
    Fighting HIV in Young Women Through Economic Empowerment
    Voices from the Field features contributions from scholars and practitioners highlighting new research, thinking, and approaches to development challenges. This post is authored by Lanice C. Williams, advocacy and partnership manager, and Mark P. Lagon, chief policy officer, at Friends of the Global Fight Against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
  • Women and Economic Growth
    Investing in Girls’ STEM Education in Developing Countries
    The education gender gap costs the world between $15 trillion and $30 trillion in human capital. U.S. aid programs need to equip girls and women to participate in the modern digital economy.
  • Development
    Why Investing in Women Matters: Mainstreaming Women’s Economic Empowerment in the World’s Poorest Countries
    Voices from the Field features contributions from scholars and practitioners highlighting new research, thinking, and approaches to development challenges. This post is authored by Esther Pan Sloane, Head of Partnerships, Policy, and Communications at the UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF).
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Women on the Blockchain: Moving Beyond “Blockchain Bros”
    Cryptocurrencies have the potential to radically alter the world's financial systems. But could they also upend inequality?
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Five Questions on Women-Led Sustainable Development: Meagan Fallone
    The Five Questions Series is a forum for scholars, government officials, civil society leaders, and foreign policy practitioners to provide timely analysis of new developments related to the advancement of women and girls worldwide. In this interview Megan Fallone, the director of Barefoot College International, highlights how the Solar Mamas' initiative has empowered women and poor communities around the world.
  • Women and Economic Growth
    The Economic Gains of Gender Parity
    Play
    Kim K. Azzarelli, Jamille Bigio, and Richard Fry analyze factors underlying the global gender wage gap and discuss the benefits of gender parity, with Elmira Bayrasli moderating.
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Womenomics Is Flipping the Script on Men in Japan
    In addressing legal barriers and challenging entrenched gender stereotypes, Japan is pushing for gender equality in the workplace and growing its economy.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria's Laws Hold Women Back, and the Economy Suffers
    Alexandra Bro is a research associate at CFR's Women and Foreign Policy program. Jack McCaslin is a research associate with CFR's Africa program. On February 23, Muhammadu Buhari was reelected as Nigeria’s president, beating his opponent and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar. While running on different platforms, central to both of their campaigns was the poor state of the country’s economy. Broadly speaking, Buhari’s solutions bent toward social justice for the poor, while Atiku’s focused on privatization and deregulation. But of the many remedies proposed by the two candidates, neither sufficiently focused on a proven strategy to boost the economy: increasing the participation of women. A large body of evidence demonstrates the positive relationship between women’s economic participation and a country’s prosperity. According to the CFR Women and Foreign Policy Program’s new digital report, Growing Economies Through Gender Parity, which visualizes data from the McKinsey Global Institute, Nigeria’s gross domestic product (GDP) could grow by 23 percent—or $229 billion—by 2025 if women participated in the economy to the same extent as men. And the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has found that strengthening gender equality in Nigeria could be an economic game-changer, leading to higher productivity and greater economic stability.  These are benefits that Nigeria cannot afford to ignore. Under Buhari’s leadership, Nigeria’s unemployment rate has continued to grow, and while the country has begun to recover from an economic recession in 2016, the IMF’s growth forecast for Nigeria’s economy remains bleak. In June 2018, World Poverty Clock estimated that ninety million Nigerians were living in extreme poverty, surpassing India as home to the largest number of poor people in the world. Furthermore, Nigeria’s poverty rate is predicted to increase from 44.2 percent today to 45.5 percent in 2030, as its GDP growth fails to keep up with population growth.  This situation disproportionately affects Nigeria’s women and girls. Girls are less likely than boys to attend school and more likely to be illiterate. In the poorest parts of the country, 75 percent of girls are out of school, and in some regions, the share of unenrolled girls is close to twice that of boys. Women also have lower access to health and financial services, and are more likely to be part of the informal economy. According to the World Bank, only 50 percent of Nigerian women participate in the labor force, compared to almost 60 percent of men. Rather than enabling women to contribute to the economy, Nigeria still has several laws on the books that make it harder for women to work than men. For example, Nigerian law does not mandate nondiscrimination in employment based on gender, nor equal remuneration for work of equal value. Women are not even allowed to work in the same industries, or perform the same tasks at work, as men; among other restrictions, it is illegal for women to work overnight in manual labor. And women who are sexually harassed at work do not have access to civil remedies. According to the Women and Foreign Policy Program’s Women’s Workplace Equality Index—which visualizes data from the World Bank and ranks 189 countries on how level the legal playing field is for women in the workforce—Nigeria comes in at number 87 on its global ranking. Merely changing the law definitely has its limitations. Government bureaucratic capacity is extremely limited and Nigerians tend to have greater faith in traditional and religious leaders than they do in secular judges and courts. Nevertheless, ensuring equality under the law remains an important first step in closing the economic gender gap, and governments around the world are starting to take action. Between 2015 and 2017, more than 110 countries undertook legal reforms that increased women’s economic opportunities. Sub-Saharan Africa is no exception. Burkina Faso now provides civil remedies for cases of sexual harassment in the workplace, and within the last three years, Zambia has made a number of reforms. It now prohibits gender-based discrimination in hiring and promotions, and mandates equal remuneration for equal work.  Certainly, increasing women’s economic participation is no panacea for Nigeria’s ailing economy. The recession in 2016, caused by its dependence on oil prices, requires economic diversification. Nigeria’s poor infrastructure is well-documented—only half of Nigerians have access to reliable electricity and frequent blackouts force businesses to run costly diesel generators to keep the lights on—and requires greater and more efficient public expenditure.  But decades of research indicate the significant economic benefits of improving women's status and allowing them to make their own decisions about work. As President Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo begin to think about how to improve the economy over their second term, eliminating legal barriers to women’s economic participation is a good place to start.
  • Economics
    2019 Robert B. Menschel Economics Symposium
    Although the global rate of extreme poverty is at a historic low, the pace of poverty reduction is slowing and the World Bank estimates that more than 700 million people still live on less than $1.90 a day. The 2019 Robert B. Menschel Economics Symposium, held on March 6, 2019, discussed the ways behavioral economics can inform development policy to create effective solutions to poverty at the international, national, and local levels. The Robert B. Menschel Economics Symposium, presented by the Maurice R. Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies, is made possible through the generous support of Robert B. Menschel. Session I: Keynote with Abhijit Banerjee  In the keynote session, Abhijit Banerjee and presider Isobel Coleman discuss behavioral economics and the impact of work on randomized controlled trials on policy. Banerjee also touches on some of the work he's done on women’s empowerment and women’s leadership.  Click here for the full transcript.  SESSION II: Policy in Practice: Addressing Poverty with Behavioral Economics During this session, Varun Gauri, Elizabeth Hardy, Matthew Klein, and presider Afsaneh M. Beschloss discuss evidence based policy, as well as how to take advantage of the recent research on behavioral economics and how it impacts poverty-reduction programs. Click here for the full transcript. 
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Codifying #MeToo Into International Law
    While #MeToo has developed “household name” familiarity worldwide, far less well known is an effort by the International Labor Organization to create the first legally binding international treaty on violence and harassment in the world of work. If adopted and ratified, this treaty would, at least on paper, provide protection to all workers and codify some of the demands of #MeToo into international law.
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Women Could Boost the Global Economy, But Outdated Laws Are Holding Them Back
    In the midst of the longest U.S. government shutdown in history, members of Congress have found a rare area of bipartisan cooperation: women's economic empowerment. Last week, President Trump signed into law the Women's Entrepreneurship and Economic Empowerment (WEEE) Act, a law that strengthens U.S. efforts to promote opportunity for female entrepreneurs worldwide. At a time when bipartisanship is elusive, elected officials on both sides of the aisle agree on one thing: Women's economic participation is a worthwhile investment. Read the full article on CNN Business Perspectives >>
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Workplace Discrimination
    Podcast
    This panel discusses how legal and policy reform in the workplace can promote women’s economic empowerment and broader growth.
  • Women and Economic Growth
    A Conversation on Financial Inclusion With World Bank CEO Kristalina Georgieva
    Play
    Kristalina Georgieva, Chief Executive Officer of the World Bank, discusses legal and regulatory disparities in access to and usage of formal financial institutions and highlight how well designed digital tools can promote the financial inclusion of women.