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by
Ann Whitehead
May
2003
Ann
Whitehead is a social anthropologist who works
on gender and development issues at the University
of Sussex. Ann can be contacted by email at: awhitehead50@btopenworld.com
Summary
This
report explores how the Poverty Reduction Strategy
Papers (PRSPs) of four countries deal with gender
issues. It assesses how far poverty is analysed
as a gendered phenomenon, and whether gender is
integrated into each countrys policies on
poverty and spending plans to combat it. It also
addresses the processes by which different voices
and interest groups influenced the content of
the PRSPs and the processes gender balance.
The report examines the form that gender issues
take in the PRSPs of Tanzania, Bolivia, Malawi
and Yemen, why they take this form, and how this
is linked to the unique design of each PRSP process.
The analysis is based on telephone interviews
and a review of primary and secondary documents.
The
twin requirements of broad-based participation
in PRSP formulation and endorsement by the Boards
of the World Bank and IMF have produced major
contradictions for the content, as well as the
process, of PRSPs. In many cases governments have
conducted national dialogue on poverty policy
not out of a genuine commitment to participation
in policy-making, but simply to fulfil this condition
of the Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) initiative
and to access debt relief funds. In some of the
case studies, civil society opposition to neo-liberal
adjustment, macroeconomic policies and indebtedness
take the form of alternative visions of development
that embody deep-rooted criticism of past government
economic policy. Their criticisms of the link
between these issues and poverty reduction have
not been allowed to surface within the PRSP process.
Poverty
analysis in the PRSPs is limited. The description
of impoverished groups does not extend to analysis
of why they are poor, so gender relations cannot
be advanced as an explanation of womens
poverty. There is insufficient disaggregation
of data by sex. Womens incomes, livelihoods
and resource constraints are poorly captured.
Although attention is paid to the qualitative
dimensions of poverty (vulnerability, voicelessness
and powerlessness) these are poorly integrated
with the rest of the poverty analysis. There is
inadequate integration between the poverty diagnosis
and the policy sections of PRSPs.
Gender
issues appear in a fragmented and arbitrary way
in the body of the PRSPs dealing with policy priorities
and budget commitments. Some womens needs
issues are raised, especially in the sections
on health and education, but gender is not integrated
or mainstreamed. Despite being recommended by
the PRSP Source Book, the separate chapter on
gender is missing in half the PRSPs reviewed.
They pay very limited attention to womens
material well being, and there is no recognition
that macroeconomic policy and national budgets
can be gendered. In some cases a more elaborated
set of gender and development policies is made,
but the link between these general goals for improvements
in womens position and tackling womens
poverty is unclear.
Governments
efforts to listen to and consult women at all
levels were unsatisfactory. At the popular level,
the choice of who to consult and the way those
consultations were carried out usually meant that
few or no womens voices were sought. When
more participatory processes were used in the
PRSP formulation process, gender issues were given
greater attention, but they were not then used
to inform the policy priorities and spending plans.
Consultations
with Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in general
were flawed, and civil society representatives
had to work very hard to get their views recorded.
However these views were rarely then reflected
in the content of the PRSPs. Mens and womens
voices were stifled in the contested space between
government and CSOs, but this was exacerbated
in the case of women and womens organisations.
Women citizens were hardly consulted at all and
gender advocates within national CSOs had little
success in influencing strategies. Womens
voices have hardly been sought and have definitely
not been heard.
National
governments and the international financial institutions
(IFIs) have played the biggest role in determining
PRSP content. Their understanding of the scope
of gender issues and the causes of womens
poverty are thus extremely important. Within the
IFIs, comprehension of gender issues is very uneven.
Within national governments, understanding of
gender issues is generally poor, particularly
in the finance and planning ministries that are
responsible for developing PRSPs. National bodies
that represent womens interests, government
ministries and civil society groups are often
weak, lacking in influence and have limited capacity
for gendered poverty analysis.
Within
national civil society organisations as a whole,
the commitment to and understanding of gender
issues is at best variable and often weak. Gender
advocates in national womens organisations
and in a limited number of donor organisations
and international NGOs (INGOs) are being left
with the responsibility for pushing gender issues
and advancing the understanding of womens
poverty. In these case studies, donors and INGOs
played a bigger role than national actors in getting
gender onto the agenda. The influence and legitimacy
of womens advocacy organisations affects
their dialogue with other groups and some have
been de-legitimised as they work within a hostile
environment. In some cases, this is true of their
relationships with other CSOs, but more often
true of their relationships with governments,
which are often very tense.
The
poor development of gendered poverty analysis
and gendered analysis of macroeconomic issues
is common among all the key actors in PRSPs. These
analyses should include attention to the sphere
of reproduction; deconstructing the household;
a focus on womens livelihoods, incomes and
employment; and an analysis of gender implications
of budget priorities and public spending. Integrating
the non-economic dimensions of poverty
vulnerability, powerlessness, voicelessness and
male-biased governance systems with these
economic dimensions is essential. Expertise in
macroeconomics and in gendered national budgets,
together with a specific focus on the micro issues
that effect womens material well being,
are needed in order to make PRSPs gender sensitive
and effective in reducing the poverty of women
and men.
Effective
advocacy from groups who have adopted such perspectives
will depend on much greater receptiveness within
governments, the IFIs, some donors, and national
and international CSOs. It remains to be seen
whether an increased capacity for gendered poverty
analysis and the understanding of national economies
from a gender perspective will increase this receptiveness,
or whether it will be blocked by a lack of political
will.
Recommendations
The
Gender and Development Network of the UK makes
the following recommendations to the various actors
involved in PRSP processes around the world:
Gendered
analysis
- The
analysis on which a PRSP is based must fully
demonstrate the gender dimensions of poverty
highlighting the embedded gender biases
in macroeconomics and structural policies; gender
inequality as a cause of poverty; the different
experiences of poverty for women and men; and
the different effects of policy and budgetary
decisions on women and men.
- PRSPs
should be based on a multidimensional view of
poverty, better integrating the non-economic
dimensions of poverty (vulnerability, powerlessness,
voicelessness and male-biased governance systems)
with the economic dimensions, and giving space
to the views of poor men and women about their
own poverty.
PRSP
processes
- National
governments should make gender-sensitive participatory
methodologies central to poverty assessments,
and the design and implementation of poverty-reduction
strategies. All actors need a better understanding
of how to make participatory poverty assessments
gender sensitive. Particular support should
be provided to the poorest and most marginalised
people, the majority of whom are women. They
tend to find it most difficult to participate,
but are central to the success of a PRSP.
- All
stakeholders within the PRSP process need to
ensure that gender is mainstreamed within their
own institutions and that gender inequalities
are addressed.
- The
PRSP assessment processes of the IFIs, including
Joint Staff Assessments and IFI board discussions,
should fully mainstream gender. They should
consider whether a PRSP treats poverty as a
gendered phenomenon and seeks to tackle the
gender dimensions of poverty, as well as the
quality of participation by women and other
traditionally marginalised groups.
Policies
for poor women and men
- In
order to have a long-term and sustainable impact
on poverty levels, PRSPs must place measures
to tackle womens poverty at their centre,
because so many poor people in most countries
are women.
- PRSP
policies and associated spending plans should
be firmly linked to gendered poverty analysis
and gender equity.
Advocacy
on gender
- Advocacy
by civil society groups around PRSPs should
have a much sharper focus on the gender dimensions
of poverty highlighting the need for
PRSP taskforces and working groups, and for
the IFIs to take gender seriously.
- During
the PRSP process, communication and trust building
need to take place between womens organisations
and other CSOs that have more access to the
PRSP process.
- INGOs
working on PRSPs should give special attention
to gender issues and womens poverty in
their international advocacy on the PRSP approach.
Capacity
building
- Capacity
building support on gendered poverty analysis
and gendered policy solutions is needed by most
national government ministries, especially ministries
of finance and planning which generally lead
PRSP processes. They also need improved capacity
to listen to CSO voices in the PRSP process,
in particular those voices representing poor
women.
- Ministries
of gender/women need capacity support to develop
their economic analysis and advocacy skills,
in order to influence PRSP processes to fully
mainstream gender.
- Donors
and INGOs should use innovative ways of supporting
the capacity of local and national CSOs to analyse
and promote gendered poverty issues through
PRSP policy-making and implementation.
- Women
and womens groups require specific help
to overcome traditional and institutional barriers
and become involved in policy-making and implementation,
particularly on economic issues. Specifically,
gender advocates will need to develop the skills
to analyse budgets in terms of their differential
impact on women and men. Such support could
be provided by governments, INGOs, international
donors and other CSOs, which have more influence
over the PRSP process.
- IFIs
must train staff, particularly those involved
in advising on PRSPs, and members of technical
missions that advise national governments about
poverty analysis, macroeconomic policy, national
budgets and sectoral policies, so that they
are able to provide gendered poverty analysis
and gendered economic analysis.
Monitoring
- In
order to avoid loosing sight of gendered PRSP
policies during implementation, gender must
be fully mainstreamed through PRSP monitoring
indicators.
National
actors should collect and analyse sex-disaggregated
data through both quantitative methods, such as
a national survey, and qualitative, participatory
methods, like interviews, and use this information
for monitoring the implementation and effects
of the PRSPs
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