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WORKING PAPERS

 

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1ICT, Financial Access and Gender Inclusion in the Formal Economic Sector: Evidence from AfricaThe study investigates the relevance of information and communication technology (ICT) in modulating the effect of financial access on female economic participation. Female economic participation is proxied by female labor force participation, financial access is measured with deposit and credit channels while ICT is proxied by mobile phone penetration, internet penetration and fixed broadband subscriptions. The focus of the study is on 48 African countries for the period 2004-2014 and the empirical evidence is based on Generalized Method of Moments. Policy thresholds are established at which, ICT modulates financial access to induce favourable effects on female economic participation. These policy thresholds are: (i) 160 mobile phone penetration (per 100 people) for the deposit channel and (ii) 2.166 and 0.75 fixed broadband subscriptions per 100 people for respectively, the deposit mechanism and credit channel. Overall the study supports the importance of ICT in moderating financial access for enhanced female economic participationJanuary 2018Download
2Globalisation and Female Economic Participation in Sub-Saharan AfricaThis study assesses the relationship between globalisation and the economic participation of women (EPW) in 47 Sub-Saharan African countries for the period 1990-2013. EPW is measured with the female labour force participation and employment rates. The empirical evidence is based on Panel-corrected Standard Errors and Fixed Effects regressions. The findings show that the positive effect of the overall globalisation index on EPW is dampened by its political component and driven by its economic and social components, with a higher positive magnitude from the former or economic globalisation. For the most part, the findings are robust to the control for several structural and institutional characteristics. An extended analysis by unbundling globalisation shows that the positive incidence of social globalization is driven by information flow (compared to personal contact and cultural proximity) while the positive effect of economic globalisation is driven by actual flows (relative to restrictions). Policy implications are discussed with some emphasis on how to elevate women’s social status and potentially reduce their victimisation to male dominance.January 2019Download
3How Enhancing Gender Inclusion Affects Inequality: Thresholds of Complementary Policies for Sustainable DevelopmentThis study investigates how enhancing gender inclusion affects inequality in 42 African countries for the period 2004-2014. The empirical evidence is based on the Generalized Method of Moments. Three inequality indicators are used, namely, the: Gini coefficient, Atkinson index, and Palma ratio. The two gender inclusion measurements used include female labour force participation and female employment. The following main findings are established. There are positive net effects on inequality from the enhancement of gender inclusion dynamics. An extended threshold analysis is used to assess critical masses at which further increasing gender inclusion enhances inequality. The established thresholds are: (i) 55.555 “employment to population ratio, 15+, female (%)”for the nexus with the Gini coefficient. (ii) 50 “labor force participation rate, female (% of female population ages 15+)” and between 50 to 55 “employment to population ratio, 15+, female (%)”, for the Atkinson index. (iii) 61.87 “labor force participation rate, female (% of female population ages 15+)” for the Palma ratio.These established thresholds are worthwhile for sustainable development because, beyond the critical masses, policy makers should complement the gender inclusion policy with other measures designed to reduce income inequality. Some complementary measures that can be taken on board beyond the established thresholds could focus on enhancing, inter alia: information and communication technology, infrastructural development; financial inclusion and inclusive education.January 2019Download
4Inequality and gender economic inclusion: the moderating role of financial access in
Sub-Saharan Africa
This study assesses how financial access can be used to modulate the effect of income
inequality on gender economic inclusion. The focus is on 42 countries in sub-Saharan Africa
(SSA) for the period 2004-2014 and the empirical evidence is based on Generalised Method
of Moments (GMM) and Fixed Effects (FE) regressions. Significant results are not apparent
in the FE regressions. The following main findings are established from the GMM
estimations. There is a negative net effect from the role of financial access in modulating the
effect of the Palma ratio on female labour force participation while there is a positive net
effect from the relevance of financial access in moderating the effect of the Gini coefficient
on female unemployment. There are also net negative effects from the role of financial access
in modulating the Gini coefficient and the Palma ratio for female employment. The
unexpected findings are elucidated and implications are discussed in the light of challenges to
Sustainable Development Goals in the sub-region. Inter alia: financial access is a necessary
but not a sufficient moderator of income inequality for the enhancement of women’s
participation in the formal economic sector.
January 2019Download
5Inequality and Gender Inclusion: Minimum ICT Policy Thresholds for Promoting
Female Employment in Sub-Saharan Africa
The study assesses how ICT modulates the effect of inequality on female economic
participation in a panel of 42 countries in sub-Saharan Africa over the period 2004-2014.
Three inequality indicators are used, namely: the Gini coefficient, the Atkinson index and the
Palma ratio. The adopted ICT indicators are mobile phone penetration, internet penetration
and fixed broadband subscriptions. Three gender economic inclusion indicators are also used
for the analysis, namely: female labour force participation, female unemployment and female
employment. The Generalised Method of Moments is employed as empirical strategy. The
findings show that enhancing ICT beyond certain thresholds is necessary for ICT to mitigate
inequality in order to enhance gender economic participation. First, for female labour force
participation, a minimum threshold of 165.714 mobile phone penetration per 100 people is
required for the Palma ratio. Second, minimum ICT thresholds for the reduction of female
unemployment are: (i) 87.783, 107.486 and 152.500 mobile phone penetration per 100 people
for respectively, the Gini coefficient, the Atkinson index and the Palma ratio; (ii) 39.618
internet penetration per 100 people for the Atkinson index and (iii) 4.500 fixed broadband
subscriptions for the Palma ratio. Third, the corresponding ICT thresholds for the promotion
of female employment are: (i) 120.369 and 85.533 mobile phone penetration per 100 people
for respectively, the Gini coefficient and the Atkinson index and (ii) 30.005 internet
penetration per 100 people for the Gini coefficient. The established thresholds make economic
sense and can be feasibly implemented by policy makers in order to induce favourable effects
on gender economic inclusion dynamics.
January 2019Download
6Inequality Thresholds, Governance and Gender Economic Inclusion in sub-Saharan AfricaInequality and gender economic exclusion are major policy concerns facing sub-Saharan
Africa in the post-2015 development agenda. The study provides critical masses of inequality
that should not be exceeded if governance is to promote gender economic participation. The
research focuses on 42 countries in sub-Saharan Africa using annual data spanning from 2004
to 2014. The empirical evidence is based on the Generalized Method of Moments. The
following findings are established. First, inequality (i.e. the Gini coefficient) levels that
completely nullify the positive effect of governance on female labour force participation are
0.708 for political stability, 0.601 for voice & accountability, 0.588 for government
effectiveness, 0.631 for regulatory quality, 0.612 for the rule of law, and 0.550 for corruptioncontrol. Second, inequality thresholds at which female unemployment can no longer be
mitigated by governance channels include: 0.561 (for political stability) and 0.465 (for the
rule of law). Third, inequality levels that completely dampen the positive impact of
governance on female employment are 0.608 for political stability, 0.580 for voice &
accountability, 0.581 for government effectiveness, and 0.557 for the rule of law. As the main
policy implication, for good governance to promote gender economic inclusion, inequality
levels should not exceed established thresholds.
January 2019Download
7Inequality, Information Technology and Inclusive Education in Sub-Saharan AfricaThis study examines linkages between inequality, information and communication technology
(ICT) and inclusive education in order to establish inequality thresholds that should not be
exceeded in order for ICT to promote inclusive education in 42 countries in sub-Saharan
Africa for the period 2004-2014. The empirical evidence is based on the Generalized Method
of Moments. The following findings are established. First, a Gini coefficient and an Atkinson
index of respectively, 0.400 and 0.625 are income inequality thresholds that should not be
exceeded in order for internet penetration to positively influence inclusive education. Second,
a Gini coefficient, an Atkinson index and a Palma ratio of respectively, 0.574, 0.676 and
9.000 are thresholds of income inequality that if exceeded, fixed broadband subscriptions will
no longer positively affect inclusive education. As a main policy implication, the established
inequality thresholds should not be exceeded in order for ICT to promote inclusive education
in sampled countries. Other implications in the light of Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) are discussed.
January 2019Download
8Sustaining cultural tourism through higher female participation in Nigeria: the role of
corporate social responsibility in oil host communities
This paper adds to the gender discourse in sustainable African tourism development from the
corporate social responsibility (CSR) perspective. Specifically, we examine the impact of
CSR on the development of rural women in cultural tourism. A total of 600 rural women
were sampled across the Niger Delta. Results from the use of a logit model indicate a
significant relationship between CSR and cultural tourism development in oil host
communities in Nigeria. This implies that CSR of a multinational oil company (MOC) is a
critical factor for sustaining cultural tourism. The findings suggest increased female
participation in General Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU) interventions of MOC and
the need to pay close attention to which extent the participation of rural women in the GMoU
projects may be limited by cultural and traditional obstacles.
January 2019Download
9The Impact of CSR Interventions on Female Education Development in the Rural Niger
Delta Region of Nigeria
The objective of this investigation was to assess the impact of multinational oil companies’
(MOCs) corporate social responsibility (CSR) interventions in female education programmes
in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. A total of 800 rural women were sampled across the
region. The results from the logit model showed that rural women depended on CSR
interventions of MOCs to address some of the logistical and cultural challenges associated
with women’s access to post-secondary education in local communities. However, despite the
significant success in supporting education initiatives generally, none of the scholarships
target females specifically, and compared to men, the low level of human capital in rural
women has persisted. This implies that if CSR interventions are not tailored to enhance
gender diversity and promote economic opportunities for women alongside education, they
may perpetuate the obstruction of women’s participation in economic, political and social
development. By extension, this could delay the reduction of poverty and attainment of
Sustainable Development Goals in the Niger Delta region.
January 2019Download
10Thresholds of income inequality that mitigate the role of gender inclusive education in
promoting gender economic inclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa
This study provides thresholds of inequality that should not be exceeded if gender inclusive
education is to enhance gender inclusive formal economic participation in sub-Saharan
Africa. The empirical evidence is based on the Generalised Method of Moments and data
from 42 countries during the period 2004-2014. The following findings are established. First,
inclusive tertiary education unconditionally promotes gender economic inclusion while the
interaction between tertiary education and inequality is unfavourable to gender economic
inclusion. Second, a Gini coefficient that nullifies the positive incidence of inclusive tertiary
education on female labour force participation is 0.562. Second, the Gini coefficient and the
Palma ratio that crowd-out the negative unconditional effects of inclusive tertiary education
on female unemployment are 0.547 and 6.118, respectively. Third, a 0.578 Gini coefficient, a
0.680 Atkinson index and a 6.557 Palma ratio are critical masses that wipe-out the positive
unconditional effects of inclusive tertiary education on female employment. Findings
associated with lower levels of education are not significant. As the main policy implication,
income inequality should not be tolerated above the established thresholds in order for gender
inclusive education to promote gender inclusive formal economic participation. Other
implications are discussed in the light of Sustainable Development Goals. This research
complements the existing literature by providing inequality thresholds that should not be
exceeded in order for gender inclusive education to promote the involvement of women in the
formal economic sector.
January 2019Download
11Finance, Governance and Inclusive Education in Sub-Saharan AfricaThis research assesses the importance of credit access in modulating governance for gender
inclusive education in 42 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa with data spanning the period 2004-
2014. The Generalized Method of Moments is employed as empirical strategy. The following
findings are established. First, credit access modulates government effectiveness and the rule
of law to induce positive net effects on inclusive “primary and secondary education”. Second,
credit access also moderates political stability and the rule of law for overall net positive
effects on inclusive secondary education. Third, credit access complements government
effectiveness to engender an overall positive impact on inclusive tertiary education. Policy
implications are discussed with emphasis on Sustainable Development Goals.
January 2020Download
12Finance, inequality and inclusive education in Sub-Saharan AfricaThis research complements the extant literature by establishing inequality critical masses that
should not be exceeded in order for financial access to promote gender parity inclusive
education in Sub-Saharan Africa. The focus is on 42 countries in the sub-region and the data
is for the period 2004-2014. The estimation approach is the Generalized Method of Moments.
When remittances are involved in the conditioning information set, the Palma ratio should not
exceed 6.000 in order for financial access to promote gender parity inclusive “primary and
secondary education” and the Atkinson index should not exceed 0.695 in order for financial
access to promote inclusive tertiary education. However, when the internet is involved in the
conditioning information set, it is established that in order for financial access to promote
inclusive primary and secondary education, the: (i) Gini coefficient should not exceed 0.571;
(ii) Atkinson index should not be above 0.750 and (iii) Palma ratio should be maintained
below 8.000. Irrespective of variable in the conditioning information set, what is apparent is
that inequality decreases the incidence of financial access on inclusive education. Hence, a
common policy measure is to reduce inequality in order to promote inclusive education using
the financial access mechanism. Policy implications are discussed in the light of Sustainable
Development Goals.
January 2020Download
13Globalization and Female Economic Participation in MINT and BRICS countriesThis study examines the effect of globalization on female economic participation (FEP) in MINT
(Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria & Turkey) and BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China & South Africa)
countries between 2004 and 2018. Four measures of globalization are employed and sourced
from KOF globalization index, 2018, while the female labour force participation rate is a proxy
for FEP. The empirical evidence is based on Pooled Mean Group (PMG) estimators. The
findings of the PMG estimator from the Panel ARDL method reveal that political and overall
globalization in MINT and BRICS countries have a positive impact on FEP, whereas social
globalization exerts a negative impact on FEP in the long-run. It is observed that economic
globalization has no long-run effect on FEP. Contrarily, all the measures of globalization posit
no short-run effect on FEP in the short-run. This supports the argument that globalization has no
immediate effect on FEP. Thus, it is recommended that both MINT and BRICS countries should
find a way of improving the process of globalization generally to empower women to be
involved in economic activities. This study complements the extant literature by focusing on how
globalization dynamics influence FEP in the MINT and BRICS countries.
August 2020Download
14Governance, Inequality and Inclusive Education in Sub-Saharan AfricaThe study provides thresholds of income inequality that if exceeded will nullify the positive
effect of governance dynamics on gender-inclusive education in 42 countries in sub-Saharan
Africa for the period 2004-2014. The Generalised Method of Moments is used as an
estimation strategy. The following findings are established. First, the unconditional effects of
governance dynamics on inclusive education are consistently positive whereas the
corresponding conditional effects from the interaction between inequality and governance
dynamics are consistently negative. Second, the levels of inequality that completely crowdout the positive incidence of governance on inclusive “primary and secondary education” are:
0.587 for the rule of law and 0.565 for corruption-control. Third, the levels of inequality that
completely dampen the positive incidence of governance on inclusive “secondary education”
are: 0.601 for “voice & accountability” and 0.700 for regulation quality. Fourth, for tertiary
education, inequality thresholds are respectively 0.568 for political stability and 0.562 for
corruption-control. The main policy implication is that for governance dynamics to promote
inclusive education in the sampled countries, income inequality levels should be kept within
the established thresholds. Other implications are discussed in the light of Sustainable
Development Goals.
January 2020Download
15Inclusive Education for Inclusive Economic Participation: the Financial Access
Channel
Purpose – The study assesses how inclusive education affects inclusive economic
participation through the financial access channel.
Design/methodology/approach – The focus is on 42 sub-Saharan African countries with data
for the period 2004-2014. The empirical evidence is based on the Generalised Method of
Moments.
Findings – The following findings are established. First, inclusive secondary education
moderates financial access to exert a positive net effect on female labour force participation.
Second, inclusive “primary and secondary school education” and inclusive tertiary education
modulate financial access for a negative net effect on female unemployment. Third, inclusive
secondary education and inclusive tertiary education both moderate financial access for an
overall positive net effect on female employment. In order to provide more gender
macroeconomic management policy options, inclusive education thresholds for
complementary policies are provided and discussed.
Originality/value – Policy implications are discussed in the light of challenges of economic
development in the sub-region and Sustainable Development Goals.
January 2020Download
16Promoting female economic inclusion for tax performance in Sub-Saharan AfricaThis study explores whether female economic inclusion enhances tax performance in a sample of
48 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa from 2000 to 2018. The study’s empirical evidence is based
on the generalized method of moments in order to account for endogeneity concerns. Three tax
performance measurements are used, notably, total taxes revenue excluding social contributions,
reported tax revenue derived from natural resources sources, and total non-resource tax revenue.
Three female inclusion indicators are used, namely, female employment in industry, female
labour force participation, and female employment. The following empirical evidences are
documented; (i) There is a negative net effect from the enhancement of female employment in
the industry on the total tax revenue. (ii) There is a positive net effect of female employment in
the industry on the non-resource taxes. An extended threshold analysis is performed to establish
the critical masses that could further influence tax performance positively. The following
thresholds are established. (i) a minimum of 15.35 “employment in industry, female (% of
female employment)” for the total tax revenue and (ii) a maximum of 23.75 “employment in
industry, female (% of female employment)” for the non-resource tax revenue. These critical
masses are crucial for sustainable development because, below or beyond these thresholds,
policy makers should complement the female economic inclusion with other economic measures
designed to improve tax performance in Sub-Saharan Africa.
January 2020Download
17The Comparative Economics of Financial Access in Gender Economic InclusionThe study has investigated the comparative importance of financial access in promoting
gender inclusion in African countries. Gender inclusion is proxied by the female labour
participation rate while financial channels include: financial system deposits and private
domestic credit. The empirical evidence is based on non-contemporary Fixed Effects
regressions. In order to provide more implications on comparative relevance, the dataset is
categorised into income levels (middle income versus (vs.) low income); legal origins (French
civil law vs. English common law); religious domination (Islam vs. Christianity); openness to
sea (coastal vs. landlocked); resource-wealth (oil-poor vs. oil-rich) and political stability
(stable vs. unstable). Six main hypotheses are tested, notably, that middle income, English
common law, Christianity, coastal, oil-rich and stable countries enjoy better levels of
“financial access”-induced gender inclusion compared to respectively, low income, French
civil law, Islam, landlocked, oil-poor and unstable countries. All six tested hypothesis are
validated. This is the first study on the comparative importance of financial access in gender
economic participation.
January 2020Download
18Women political empowerment and vulnerability to climate change:
evidence from developing countries
The objective of this article is to analyze the effect of the political empowerment of women
on vulnerability to climate change in 169 countries for the period 1995-2017. The empirical
evidence which is based on panel fixed effects regressions shows that: i) the political
empowerment of women as well as its components (i.e. civil liberties of women, participation
of women in civil society and participation of women in political debates) reduce
vulnerability to climate change. ii) The underlying effect is most pronounced in upper middle
income, Latin American, small and fragile countries. iii) Public spending on education, the
effectiveness of governance and education are the real transmission channels through which
vulnerability to climate change is affected by women’s political empowerment. The findings
are robust to alternative estimation methods such as the Tobit, the dynamic fixed effects, and
the generalized method of moments regressions. Policy implications are discussed, inter alia,
the need for sampled countries to encourage women's political empowerment in order to
reduce risks linked to climate change.
Febuary 2021Download