Abstract
This study presents fresh evidence that market interventions aimed at empowering women are more effective in the presence of formal political institutions, using the case of political reservations for women in Indian local governments. It uses data from 2,423 households in 100 Indian villages and accounts for endogeneity through the instrumental variable method to investigate women engaged in the Indian dairy sector following the implementation of India’s National Dairy Plan, which seeks to connect women with formal retail markets. Results suggest that while markets provide “passive” forms of agency to women, political representation can transition this to “active” forms of agency, allowing women to exhibit purposeful behavior. However, spillover effects of reservations (quotas) do not contribute significantly to women’s intrahousehold agency since they continue to depend on male counterparts for routine and intermittent decisions. Additionally, in community matters, the cumulative effect of reservations is more pronounced than standalone market impacts.
HIGHLIGHTS
Development interventions aimed at connecting women with labor markets have limited, short-term impacts on women’s agency because the ability of women to influence household decisions often depends on their social backgrounds.
While the link between economic empowerment and development is weak, changes in social structures can promote women’s greater participation in decision making.
Provisions in India’s 73rd Constitutional Amendment that propose political quotas for women in Indian local governments have helped loosen patriarchal social structures.
Funding agencies and development organizations can generate larger and long-term empowerment outcomes for women by mounting market interventions in combination with more gender-inclusive formal political institutions.
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1080/13545701.2020.1752394
Notes
1 SC and ST are officially designated groups of historically disadvantaged people in India, while OBC is a collective term used to classify castes that are educationally or socially disadvantaged.
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Notes on contributors
Vivek Pandey
Vivek Pandey is Associate Professor of Economics at the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA), and the Chair of Verghese Kurien Policy Lab. His interests include interaction between development policies and intrahousehold dynamics and policy evalution.
Shyam Singh
Shyam Singh is Associate Professor (Social Sciences) at the Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA), India. His research interests includes social policies, governance and, social networks.
Jeemol Unni
Jeemol Unni is Professor of Economics at Ahmedabad University, India. She is a Labor Economist. Her research focus is on the informalization of labor and the gender implication of this process.