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Women, assets, and formal savings: A comparative analysis of Ecuador, Ghana and India

Cheryl Doss, Hema Swaminathan, Carmen Diana Deere, J. Y. Suchitra, Abena D. Oduro and Boaz Anglade
Journal Name
Development Policy Review
Journal Publication
others
Publication Year
2020
Journal Publications Functional Area
Public Policy
Publication Date
Vol. 38, Issue 2, March 2020, Pg. 180-205
Abstract

Motivation

Savings are an important but often overlooked component of financial inclusion. While women are less active than men in the formal financial sector there is little understanding about their ability to accumulate savings.

Purpose

We hypothesize that a woman’s individual economic status, measured by her property ownership, is an important driver of her ability to save.

Approach and Methods

Women are considered as savers in the formal sector only if they have savings above a minimum threshold. Three measures of women’s asset ownership are used: two capture their absolute property status and one their relative status in the household. The data are obtained from three large-scale surveys that collected individual-level asset data in Ecuador, Ghana and the Indian state of Karnataka. Logistic regression models are employed to examine the relationship between women’s property ownership and accumulation of savings.

Findings

The absolute value of a woman’s physical assets and her share of household physical wealth are correlated with being able to accumulate formal savings. Women’s relative wealth status is more strongly related to their savings, along with education, paid employment and group membership.

Conclusions

Women’s intrahousehold status, defined by their relative wealth, is critical to determining their ability to save in formal accounts.

Policy Implications

Interventions that boost women’s bargaining power, by increasing their property ownership, should be encouraged, along with greater efforts to improve girls’ access to quality education. Functional literacy training for older women can both reduce barriers to accessing financial institutions and create awareness of their benefits. Constraints to women’s participation in the labour force should be removed in tandem with interventions to reduce gender earnings gaps.

Women, assets, and formal savings: A comparative analysis of Ecuador, Ghana and India

Author(s) Name: Cheryl Doss, Hema Swaminathan, Carmen Diana Deere, J. Y. Suchitra, Abena D. Oduro and Boaz Anglade
Journal Name: Development Policy Review
Volume: Vol. 38, Issue 2, March 2020, Pg. 180-205
Year of Publication: 2020
Abstract:

Motivation

Savings are an important but often overlooked component of financial inclusion. While women are less active than men in the formal financial sector there is little understanding about their ability to accumulate savings.

Purpose

We hypothesize that a woman’s individual economic status, measured by her property ownership, is an important driver of her ability to save.

Approach and Methods

Women are considered as savers in the formal sector only if they have savings above a minimum threshold. Three measures of women’s asset ownership are used: two capture their absolute property status and one their relative status in the household. The data are obtained from three large-scale surveys that collected individual-level asset data in Ecuador, Ghana and the Indian state of Karnataka. Logistic regression models are employed to examine the relationship between women’s property ownership and accumulation of savings.

Findings

The absolute value of a woman’s physical assets and her share of household physical wealth are correlated with being able to accumulate formal savings. Women’s relative wealth status is more strongly related to their savings, along with education, paid employment and group membership.

Conclusions

Women’s intrahousehold status, defined by their relative wealth, is critical to determining their ability to save in formal accounts.

Policy Implications

Interventions that boost women’s bargaining power, by increasing their property ownership, should be encouraged, along with greater efforts to improve girls’ access to quality education. Functional literacy training for older women can both reduce barriers to accessing financial institutions and create awareness of their benefits. Constraints to women’s participation in the labour force should be removed in tandem with interventions to reduce gender earnings gaps.