Home  |  Browse  |  Authors  |  Advanced Search  |  Help
Login | Create Account
Abu-Ghaida, Dina and Klasen, Stephan (January 2003): The Costs of Missing the Millennium Development Goal on Gender Equity. Discussion Papers in Economics 2003-1

Metadaten exportieren

Autor(en) recherchieren

Lesezeichen anlegen

[img]
Preview
PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Reader
178Kb

Abstract

At the Millennium Summit, the world community pledged to promote gender equality and chose as a specific target the achievement of gender equity in primary and secondary education by the year 2005 in every country of the world. Based on the findings from a growing empirical literature that suggests that gender equity in education promotes economic growth and reduce fertility, child mortality, and undernutrition, we estimate what the costs in terms of growth, and forgone fertility, mortality and undernutrition reduction, will be for the 45 countries that are, on current projections, unlikely to meet the target. Our estimates suggest that, by 2005, the countries that are off track are likely to suffer 0.1-0.3 percentage points lower per capita growth rates as a result and will have 0.1-0.4 more children per woman, and, by 2015, an average of 14 per 1000 higher rates of under five mortality and 2.4 percentage points higher prevalence of underweight children under five. Sensitivity analyses suggest that the results are quite robust to using different specifications and approaches to estimating these losses.

Item Type:Paper (Discussion Paper)
Subjects:Economics
Economics > Discussion Papers in Economics
Economics > Discussion Papers in Economics > Economic Policy
Economics > Discussion Papers in Economics > Development Economics
Economics > Discussion Papers in Economics > Welfare Economics
Dewey Classification:300 Social sciences
300 Social sciences > 330 Wirtschaft
Journal of Economic Literature classification:I2, J7, J16
URN:urn:nbn:de:bvb:19-epub-2-2
Language:English
ID Code:2
Deposited On:13. Apr 2005
Last Modified:28. Jun 2010 14:26
Open Access LMU is powered by EPrints 3 which is developed by the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton. More information and software creditsAbout