2. Gender and Macroeconomic Policy in Africa
A focus on the macro policy level in work on gender and
development uncovers the systemic nature of gender disadvantage and of gendered
perceptions, as the work of Diane Elson, among others, has convincingly shown
(Elson, 1992; 1995). The gender critique of macroeconomic policy making points
first to the invisibilization of domestic work, largely done by
women, upon which the rest of the economy depends. The strategic
silence (Bakker, 1994) of economic policy analysis with regard to the
unpaid sector of the economy implies that this sector is unimportant, and exists
in parallel to and independent of the monetized sector. Policy makers thus tend
to assume that womens labour time is infinitely elastic. However, the two
parts of the economy are in fact highly interdependent. For example, cuts in
public expenditure leading to reduced government health services can have
implications for womens workload in caring for ill family members;
womens subsistence agricultural production (in kitchen
gardens) reduces the reservation wage of household males; cuts in fuel
subsidies are often offset by increased womens time spent cooking and in
transportation. In fact, womens unpaid work effectively subsidizes the
monetized sector in many ways.
A second key feature of the gender critique is that
macroeconomic policy making treats markets and institutions as if they were not
gendered. Units of analysis are firms and households, which are characterized as
if they have no intra-unit relations, and the only significant differences
between agents in markets are tastes, income and (sometimes) information. This
means that conventional macroeconomic analyses have no way of dealing with
situations in which women are systematically excluded from or disadvantaged in
credit, labour or output markets, or of understanding the implications of these
situations for womens mobility between activities during adjustment, and
for their incentives in work effort. The gender blindness of macroeconomics
means that primary economic agents are male by default. Thus, in the African
context, farmer usually means a man. This problem operates not only
in analysis but also in policy implementation, with extension services and
credit targeted at men.
The centrality of smallholder, household-based farming to the
African economies means that much of the debate and research on gender,
economics and economic policy has focused on intra-household gender relations
and agriculture. Given the dominance of agriculture in Ugandas economy -
accounting for about half of GNP and over 90 per cent of export value - as well
as the explicit reliance on agricultural intensification as the primary means of
growing out of poverty (World Bank 1993; 1996), the interrelations
between gender and agricultural intensification were identified as the focus of
the UNRISD/UNDP project.
There are two issues or perspectives to be examined in relation
to macroeconomic policy. One is concerned with the implication of gender
relations for the efficiency of macroeconomic policy. Within Africa, the
central plank of policy has been the restructuring of the agricultural economy
toward expanded production of tradable (effectively export) crops through
relative price changes and liberalization of markets. Here, gender analyses have
focused on factors that prevent or constrain women from being able to take part
in the opportunities offered by adjustment, or that mean that they have little
or no incentive to do so. These factors include a gender-specific lack of access
to markets and resources such as land and credit, a lack of information, and not
being paid the marginal return to labour. These problems are seen as arising out
of womens unequal burden of domestic labour, and asymmetric power
relations within the household. Thus women are generally excluded from a process
of positive feedback between price incentives, increased production, increased
revenue and investment in yield-enhancing measures. They cannot respond
independently to policy measures because they lack independent access to
resources, and, while their labour is central to the production of exports crops
for their husbands or households, they have little incentive to increase this
labour because it is unpaid. In addition, because women are also responsible for
household labour and food production, there may also be little room for an
increase in the amount of labour time which they can put into export crop
production without a decrease in the amount of time spent on domestic work or
food production.
Much of the work concerned with gender and efficiency problems
in adjustment comes from within a neoclassical tradition (e.g. Collier, 1988;
1994; Haddad et al., 1995) and takes the underlying institutional basis of
gender inequalities as given. The emphasis has been on tailoring adjustment
measures to make them more efficient within the framework of existing gender
relations. As Haddad et al. (1995: 881) put it:
If... adjustment measures ignore the host of
non-price mechanisms that hinder the response of women relative to men,
adjustment will be impaired. Likewise, if the costs to adjustment measures are
expected to be borne disproportionately by women when they are less able than
men to bear them, adjustment will ultimately fail.
The other main issue to be examined deals with the implications
of macroeconomic policy for gender equity. The concern is that, because
of existing gender inequalities in markets and institutions, policies aimed at
adjustment in the economy may actually make things relatively worse for women.
The incentives for expanded production of export crops (or indeed domestic food
crops with liberalized food markets) may mean that more labour is expected of
women in household farming. But the fact that it is seen as family farming, with
the product controlled by a male head of household, may also mean that the extra
work is done for no, or minimal, extra return. Expanded production of
male-controlled crops may thus impinge on womens time, on other crops they
grow under their own control, and on household food security. Depending on the
design and implementation of adjustment, crops that were formerly grown for own
consumption can become commercialized (in Uganda this has happened with maize),
and come under mens control. Overall, these changes may lead to a
reduction of womens bargaining power within the household with adverse
effects on their welfare (and that of their children). However, some changes
under adjustment programmes may also be of relative benefit to women. For
example, there is some evidence that the liberalization of food markets has
increased womens incomes in Tanzania (Booth, 1990), and that in some cases
the balance of power in the household has shifted toward women (Pottier, 1995).
In any situation in which intra-household relations are renegotiated, of course,
the actual outcome will vary with individual women within individual households.
As womens and mens productive spheres become more integrated, some
women will have access to broader personal and productive opportunities than
they had formerly, while others will lose their former autonomy with little
compensation (Sorensen, 1996). Much will depend on the personal characteristics
and resources of the individuals involved.
These concerns raise three questions. The first is whether,
and how far, gender relations may hinder the further growth of agricultural
export production, especially through discouraging productivity growth. The
second question is what the process of growth is doing to womens
independent farming, to womens work burdens, to food security and to
social reproduction. The third question is what the government can do,
in particular, how it can develop the intended policy instruments to address
these issues. This research was designed to shed further light on these
questions.