Economic Efficiency or Gender Equality: Conceptualizing an Equitable “Social Framing” for Economic Evaluations to Support Gender Equality in Disaster Risk- and Environmental-Management Decision-Making
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Aims and Primary Limitations of Mainstream Cost–Benefit Approaches
2.2. Characterizing Distributive Concerns
2.2.1. Why Utilize the Gender, Disaster, and Development Literature?
2.2.2. Key Illustrations from Gender-Responsive Studies
2.2.3. Heterogeneity and Diversity
2.2.4. Gender Based Violence (GBV)
2.2.5. Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH)
2.2.6. Women’s Employment
2.2.7. “Active” Participation and Representation
3. Methods
4. Results
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Heterogeneity and diversity |
Agency |
Formal and informal rights |
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Displacement |
Inclusion and representation |
Disaster impacts |
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Disaster response |
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Technical and study design |
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Reference | Study Aims, Key Findings and Economic Evaluation Description |
---|---|
Bandiera, et al. [50] | Aims and findings: Reports CBA for a Randomized Control Trial (RCT) conducted in Africa examining the impacts of vocational and life skills training program for adolescent girls. Program is led by female mentor, provides “safe-space” and is held after school. Findings recommend the “program increases labor force participation and reduces childbearing, marriage and unprotected sex in participants” [51] (ibid: 44). Method: CBA Perspective: provider What is cost: initial program investment of setting up a program office, training of program staff and program manual development; infrastructure costs; variable costs of the program. Categories: SRH; GBV; economic empowerment. |
Tate et al. [49] | Aims and findings: Investigates post-flood property acquisition from the perspectives of cost effectiveness and social equity. (modified) CBA is conducted at the parcel scale and social equity is assessed with a social vulnerability index tailored to flood recovery in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Results recommend that property acquisitions are cost-effective based on the avoidance of future losses, further that socially vulnerable neighborhoods were prioritized [49] (p.2055). Method: CBA Perspective: societal What is cost: benefits are determined in terms of avoided losses (i.e., expected reduction in damage (average annualized losses) that would occur given the distribution of stream flows); benefits are then compared to expenditures for the buyout program. HAZUS-MH flood model used to estimate physical damage and economic loss for each parcel. Categories: policy effectiveness. |
Pereznieto et al. [47] | Aims and findings: Estimates the annual global costs of different forms of violence against children. Results recommend that annual costs of child labor are approximately USD 97 Billion, those associated with children’s association with armed forces or groups reach up to USD 144 Million annually. Despite strong evidence for cost effectiveness of prevention measures, current levels of government spending on preventive and responsive actions in relation to violence against children remain very low. Method: (other) CBA Perspective: provider, societal What is cost: costs of implementing policies and programs to address the issue; government and donor spending on violence prevention; other direct costs (medical treatment, income loss from disruption to employment); Indirect costs (i.e., to victims and communities) based on a productivity approach. Categories: GBV; children. |
Clots-Figueras [3] | Aims and findings: Reviews recent economic evaluations of activities/interventions intended to address gender equality concerns. Makes recommendations regarding benefits/costs of post-2015 gender equality targets for the post-2015 development agenda. Recommends: programs increasing the number of years of education and increasing the age of marriage can have a (benefit–cost ratio) BCR of 5 (citing [52]); giving women the choice of whether and when to have children could have a BCR between 90 and 150 (citing [51]). Programs improving women’s access to income generating activities have a BCR of 7 (citing [50]). Method: (other) CBA Perspective: provider What is cost: variable depending on case studies examined, but generally costs of program development/implementation Categories: GBV; SRH. |
Norheim et al. [10] | Aims and findings: Article presents the Guidance for Priority Health Setting in Health Care (GPS-Health), initiated by the World Health Organization, which offers a set of criteria in a checklist format to be considered in addition to cost-effectiveness analysis. Recommends that cost effectiveness analysis, the main approach to establishing health priority setting, only addresses the objective of maximizing health, and it does not adequately social equity [10] (p.2). Method: (other) CEA Perspective: service provider What is cost: Criteria were developed through a process of literature review and expert consultation. Categories: economic |
Remme et al. [11] | Aims and findings: Utilizes the “What works for women” evidence review as a basis to conduct a literature review of cost effectiveness gender-responsive interventions for HIV. 22 studies were found with a gender focus, 11 of these reported cost effectiveness or cost utility information. Method: (other) CEA Perspective: all from the provider perspective, with one also considering societal costs. What is cost: The British Medical Journal’s checklist for economic evaluations was used by two reviewers to assess robustness of studies. Cost per disability-adjusted life year (DALY) averted or quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained below the country’s per capita gross domestic product was considered cost-effective. Categories: GBV; SRH. |
Reference | Study Aims, Key Findings and Economic Evaluation Description |
---|---|
Duflo, Dupas and Kremer [52] | Aims and findings: Examines the impact of two leading policy instruments in Kenya using an RCT: education subsidies (providing free uniforms in the last three years of primary school) and HIV prevention education focused on abstinence until marriage, implemented alone or jointly, on sexual behavior, pregnancy, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Results recommends that the education subsidy implemented alone shows reduced dropout for boys/girls, and delayed fertility, but no effect on STIs; HIV program alone led to more early pregnancies (in wedlock), but less out of wedlock; no significant reduction in pregnancies or STIs; when implemented jointly, fertility fell less than educational intervention alone, but STIs fell more; girls were 20% less likely to be infected with HS2V in seven-year follow up, no change for boys; add on component regarding condom education led to greater awareness, but not greater use. Method: Model Perspective: provider What is considered: costs of stand-alone HIV subsidy (HIV); stand-alone education subsidy (S); joint program (S+HIV); pupil attendance rate; pregnancy and marital status. Category: SRH |
MacMillan [53] | Aims and findings: Proposes a life-course model for estimating the long-term costs of violent victimization. Utilizes prospective, longitudinal data from a national sample of American adolescents, and retrospective data from a national sample of Canadians, to estimate income losses over the life cycle associated with violent victimization. Results recommend: incomes losses from violent victimization are age-graded, with greatest costs occurring when victimization occurs during adolescence; criminal violence during adolescence appears to disrupt educational and occupational attainment; total costs are much higher than previous research estimates. Method: Model Perspective: cost to criminal violence to victims. What is cost: financial losses directly attributable to victimization experience (i.e., out of pocket expenses for general healthcare; insurance costs; lost wages and productivity; mental health service costs). Category: SRH, GBV. |
Reference | Study Aims, Key Findings and Economic Evaluation Description |
---|---|
Ray-Bennett [25] | Aims and findings: Qualitative study examining role between microcredit and vulnerability reduction in women headed households to multiple disasters (super cyclone in 1999, floods in 2001, 2003, and drought in 2002) in Orissa, India. Results recommend that microcredit is a useful tool to replace women’s livelihood assets that have been lost during disasters. However, insufficient delivery of microcredit can cause micro-debts and exacerbate caste, class and gender inequalities. Method: Microfinance Perspective: ethnographic study including three sets of informants (12 women-headed households, 6 government officials, 10 NGO workers) reflects consideration of provider, societal perspectives. What is considered: women’s access to microfinance; positive/negative economic and social outcomes of microfinance. |
Baird et al. [48] | Aims and findings: Assesses the effectiveness of cash transfers (to girls and their families) in Malawi for reduction of HIV and herpes simplex type 2 (HSV2) infections in never married girls aged 13–22 years using a cluster randomized trial. Monthly cash transfers to families of out-of-school girls significantly reduced HIV infection rates after 18 months for girls who were enrolled in school at baseline. Method: Cash transfers Perspective: provider What is considered: HIV, HSV2 infection rates, reported sexual behavior, knowledge of HIV transmission; What is cost: average household transfer size, administrative costs, program costs against HIVE infection averted cost estimate of USD 5,000 Category: SRH |
Smith [13] | Aims and findings: Discusses the economics of breast feeding and how the current G20 approach to the “gender gap” fails to acknowledge the ability of breastfeeding to promote children’s food security and maternal and child health. Market regulations focus on potential risks of donating breast milk, rather than the health risks of exposing infants and young children to bovine-milk. Method: Markets Perspective: societal What is considered: how market mechanisms influence breastfeeding; health impacts of breastfeeding vs. formula feeding; Category: SRH; women’s rights to breastfeed; food security; nutrition. |
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Shreve, C. Economic Efficiency or Gender Equality: Conceptualizing an Equitable “Social Framing” for Economic Evaluations to Support Gender Equality in Disaster Risk- and Environmental-Management Decision-Making. Resources 2016, 5, 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources5030025
Shreve C. Economic Efficiency or Gender Equality: Conceptualizing an Equitable “Social Framing” for Economic Evaluations to Support Gender Equality in Disaster Risk- and Environmental-Management Decision-Making. Resources. 2016; 5(3):25. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources5030025
Chicago/Turabian StyleShreve, Cheney. 2016. "Economic Efficiency or Gender Equality: Conceptualizing an Equitable “Social Framing” for Economic Evaluations to Support Gender Equality in Disaster Risk- and Environmental-Management Decision-Making" Resources 5, no. 3: 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources5030025
APA StyleShreve, C. (2016). Economic Efficiency or Gender Equality: Conceptualizing an Equitable “Social Framing” for Economic Evaluations to Support Gender Equality in Disaster Risk- and Environmental-Management Decision-Making. Resources, 5(3), 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources5030025