Carmen Diana Deere Center for Latin American Studies and Food & Resource Economics University of...

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Gender, Asset Ownership and Wealth in Ecuador Carmen Diana Deere Center for Latin American Studies and Food & Resource Economics University of Florida

Transcript of Carmen Diana Deere Center for Latin American Studies and Food & Resource Economics University of...

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  • Carmen Diana Deere Center for Latin American Studies and Food & Resource Economics University of Florida
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  • Presentation 1. Why assets important for the study of gender inequality 2. Methodology 3. The Gender Asset Gap 4. The Gender Wealth Gap 5. Comparative perspectives: Role of marital & inheritance regimes 6. Tentative conclusions 2
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  • 1. Why Assets? Traditional poverty studies: poverty as lack of income or consumption a snapshot of a moment in time Asset-based poverty studies: focus on accumulation of stock of assets over household life cycle Full definition: physical & financial capital, natural capital, human capital, social capital Our focus on physical & financial assets (wealth) 3
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  • Assets: a Key Component of Well- Being Assets Livelihood Strategies Full incomes Consumption & Savings
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  • Physical & Financial Assets 1. Means of production 2. May generate rent, interest, profit 3. Have current use value or provide services 4. Serve as collateral for loans 5. Buffer during emergencies can be pawned, mortgaged, sold 6. Store of wealth can be passed on to future generations 7. Provide economic security & reduce probability of falling into chronic poverty 8. Generate status and social advantage
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  • The conceptual problem Until recently most asset-based poverty studies have focused on households But Can we assume that all members have the same access to household assets? Can we assume that all members benefit equally from household assets? 6
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  • Propositions of Feminist Economics Household and individual welfare not necessarily the same Individual asset ownership related to: womens well-being their fall-back position: how well off they would be in case of household dissolution (separation, divorce, widowhood; choice whether to marry) their bargaining position within marriage Role in decision-making Inversely related to domestic violence Less likely to fall into poverty
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  • The empirical problem Up until recently, few household surveys collected individual-level information on assets Gender analysis limited to studying differences between female and male household heads Inappropriate unit of analysis Headship analysis underestimates womens ownership of assets since ignores situation of women in male- headed households (Deere, Alvarado & Twyman 2012)
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  • 2. Methodology Part of 3-country study (Ecuador, Ghana, India) financed by MDG3 Fund of Dutch Foreign Ministry Ecuador study based at FLACSO, Quito 6 months of qualitative field work in 3 provinces (focus groups, key informant interviews, asset market study) Nationally representative survey of 2,892 households (EAFF 2010) Truncated: doesnt include the wealthiest Employed both household and individual-level questionnaires
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  • The respondents the main adult couple in dual-headed households (68.5%) the adult male (6.7%) or female (24.8%) in single-headed households
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  • Setting- Ecuador divided into 3 regions: sierra, coast & Amazon
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  • Setting - Highly urbanized
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  • Setting - Middle income country
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  • 3. The Gender Asset Gap Different Measures: Distribution of assets by form of ownership Unit of analysis is the asset Forms of ownership include individual and joint Joint ownership broken down by: Couple All household members together Other household members (a mother & son, etc.; also includes household member(s) with non-household members) Incidence of asset ownership Unit of analysis is the asset owner Measures % of adult men and women who own the asset
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  • Distribution of Assets by Form of Ownership
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  • Incidence of Ownership by Adults
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  • 4. The Gender Wealth Gap Wealth Data Presented: Market value Gross rather than net worth Based on reconciliation of Household and Individual questionnaires + imputed missing values Weighted by sample expansion factors
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  • Distribution of Gross Household Wealth by Sex (US$) AssetMenWomenTotal Physical assets38,347,264,99643,826,220,22482,173,485,220 %46.753.3100.0 Financial assets1,238,095,052488,741,1592,026,836,211 %61.138.9100.0 Total Gross Wealth39,585,360,04844,614,961,38284,200,321,430 %47.053.0100.0 Source: EAFF 2010 (rev.)
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  • Distribution of Asset Wealth by Sex
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  • The Gendered Composition of Wealth
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  • Distribution of Household Wealth by Quintiles and Sex QuintilesTotalMenWomen I y II 3.23.03.3 III 8.1 8.2 IV 20.719.321.9 V 68.069.666.6 Total 100.0 Source: EAFF 2010 (rev.)
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  • What this means in practice Quintile I or II Quintile IV or V
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  • 5. Comparative Perspectives on the Gender Wealth Gap CountryFemale Share of Physical Wealth (%) Ecuador53.0 Ghana30.2 Karnataka, India19.0
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  • Distribution of Principal Residence by Form of Ownership The Gender Asset Gap Project Excludes Bangalore
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  • The Importance of Marital Regimes Determine the rules governing property during marriage Differ according to how assets acquired before and during the marriage are treated Types: Separation of property Partial community property Full community property
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  • Womens Property Rights in Ecuador Marital Regime: partial community property Assets acquired prior to marriage Assets acquired during the marriage Inheritances Individual property Joint property of the couple Individual property If marriage dissolves, split 50- 50
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  • Womens Property Rights in Ghana & India Marital Regime: separation of property Assets acquired prior to marriage Assets acquired during the marriage Inheritances Individual property If marriage dissolves, wives have no claim on husbands property
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  • Ecuador: Evidence of Relatively Equitable Inheritance practices
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  • 6. Tentative Conclusions 1. Marital & inheritance regimes make a difference Women in Ecuador relatively better off because of joint community property in marriage & gender equitable inheritance norms 2. Wealth adds a new and important dimension to the study of gender and social inequality 3. Differing composition of wealth by quintile suggests new avenues for research and policy interventions to reduce asset poverty and hence household vulnerability
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  • Tentative Conclusions 4. Troubling that female-headed households concentrated in poorest wealth quintiles Requires further analysis on whether there BECAUSE lost assets when relationship dissolved or other factors 5. Overall, hope to have demonstrated why important to collect individual-level data on asset ownership and wealth
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  • Thank you! For the country studies & comparative report see: http://genderassetgap.iimb.ernet.in