Vincent Somville on barriers to female empowerment

WIDER Seminar Series

WIDER Seminar Series - Vincent Somville on barriers to female empowerment


On 28 March 2018, Assistant Professor Vincent Somville of the Norwegian School of Economics will present at the WIDER Seminar Series

Abstract – Barriers to female empowerment: Evidence from a field experiment in Tanzania 

Many young girls in developing countries experience early pregnancy and lifelong dependence upon family and partners, which may prevent them from reaching their full productive and social potential. In this paper, we consider two potential barriers to female empowerment — lack of reproductive health knowledge and lack of economic opportunities — and report from a randomized control field experiment of an empowerment programme involving 3,900 adolescent girls in 80 schools in rural Tanzania. One group was randomly offered a training programme on reproductive health, a second group was offered a programme on entrepreneurship, while a third group was offered both training programmes. The evidence from two rounds of follow-up surveys shows that both the entrepreneurship programme and the combined programme have empowered the girls in the economic domain, while the impact of the reproductive health training is more muted. These findings suggest that entrepreneurship training is more important than health training in empowering the adolescent girls. Regarding the health domain, we do not find any evidence of a treatment effect of either training programme.

WIDER Seminar Series

The WIDER Seminar Series showcases recent and ongoing work on key topics in development economics. The weekly sessions held in Helsinki are open to local and visiting researchers, policy makers, and others interested in development topics. Click here to learn more.

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