Ethnicity, Women's Empowerment and Decisions about Children's Education in Ghana

IF 1.4 3区 经济学 Q3 ECONOMICS
Ralitza Dimova, David Fielding
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

There is evidence from some low-income countries that women's empowerment is associated with better child health and education outcomes, suggesting that mothers value these outcomes more than fathers do, on average. We hypothesise that this difference will be smaller in matrilineal societies, and using a Ghanaian household survey that includes data on children's education, we find evidence consistent with this distinction between matrilineal and patrilineal cultures. Women's empowerment is higher, on average, in matrilineal households, but this does not explain why their mean educational expenditure is higher, because empowerment in matrilineal households has no significant effect on expenditure. One possible explanation for these findings is cross-cultural heterogeneity in parental preferences: in the matrilineal society, women are more empowered, on average, and more money is spent on children's education, but the first difference is not the cause of the second.
加纳的种族、妇女赋权与儿童教育决策
一些低收入国家的证据表明,妇女赋权与更好的儿童健康和教育成果相关,这表明平均而言,母亲比父亲更重视这些成果。我们的假设是,在母系社会中,这种差异会更小。我们利用加纳的一项家庭调查(其中包括有关儿童教育的数据),发现了与母系和父系文化差异相一致的证据。平均而言,母系家庭中妇女的赋权程度较高,但这并不能解释为什么她们的平均教育支出较高,因为母系家庭中的赋权对支出没有显著影响。这些发现的一个可能解释是父母偏好的跨文化异质性:在母系社会中,妇女平均赋权更高,子女教育支出也更多,但第一个差异并不是第二个差异的原因。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Journal of African Economies is a vehicle to carry rigorous economic analysis, focused entirely on Africa, for Africans and anyone interested in the continent - be they consultants, policymakers, academics, traders, financiers, development agents or aid workers.
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