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Gender Responsive Budgeting in Education - Advocacy Brief

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posted on 2024-10-30, 17:13 authored by Reina IchiiReina Ichii
Government budgeting is typically thought of balancing the books: money in and money out, with consideration given to wide sectors of the community that will be affected by the budget, such as industry, families, education or health. However, very little considerations given to the impact budgets have upon men and women respectively. Budget papers focus on financial aggregates of revenues, and expenditures and balances as either being in surplus or deficit. A link between government budgets and gender issues is usually not explicitly made, and gender issues are often addressed by social rather than economic policy. Consequently, government budgets are often perceived as gender-neutral. This gender-neutral assumption ignores the fact that budgetary impacts are often different and unequal between men and women (Budlender and Sharp, 1998). This is because men and women, on the whole, occupy different socio-economic positions, play different roles and undertake different responsibilities in the paid and unpaid economy. For example, women are more likely to earn lower incomes compared to men, hold less wealth, live in poverty with dependent children and undertake more of the share of unpaid work.

History

Subtype

  • Public Sector

Outlet

Asia-Pacific Programme of Education for All

Place published

Bangkok, Thailand

Extent

28 pages

Language

English

Medium

Research report

Copyright

© UNESCO 2010

Former Identifier

2006027922

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-12-10

Publisher

UNESCO Asia and Pacific Regional Bureau for Education

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