Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India

Despite rapid economic growth, gender disparities in women's economic participation have remained deep and persistent in India. What explains these gender disparities? Is it poor infrastructure, limited education, or the composition of the labor force and industries? Or is it deficiencies in social and business networks and a low share of incumbent female entrepreneurs? This note analyzes the spatial determinants of female entrepreneurship in India in the manufacturing and services sectors. It finds that good infrastructure and education predict higher female entry shares. Gender networks also influence women's economic participation, as strong agglomeration economies exist in both manufacturing and services. A higher female ownership among incumbent businesses within a district-industry predicts a greater share of subsequent female entrepreneurs. Moreover, higher female ownership of local businesses in related industries (similar labor needs, input-output markets) predicts greater relative female entry rates. Unlocking female empowerment and entrepreneurship is a direct path to shared prosperity and a more dynamic and sustainable growth.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kerr, William, Ghani, Ejaz, O'Connell, Stephen D.
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-02
Subjects:ACCESS TO EDUCATION, AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS, AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES, CITIES, DISCRIMINATION, DISTRICTS, ECONOMIC BENEFITS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, EMPOWERMENT, FAMILIES, FEMALE, FEMALE EMPLOYMENT, FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS, FEMALE LABOR, FEMALE LABOR FORCE, FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, FEMALE LITERACY, GENDER, GENDER BALANCE, GENDER COMPOSITION, GENDER DISPARITIES, GENDER EQUALITY, GENDER GAP, GENDER IMBALANCES, INEQUALITY, INFORMAL SECTOR, LABOR FORCE, LABOR LAWS, LABOR MARKET, LABOR MARKETS, LAND TRANSPORT, LITERACY, LOCAL INPUT, LOCAL TRANSPORT, MOBILITY, MOTOR VEHICLES, OCCUPATIONS, POACHING, POPULATION DENSITY, PRODUCTIVITY, ROADS, ROLE OF WOMEN, SAFETY, SANITATION, SEX, SEX RATIO, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORTATION, TRANSPORTATION COSTS, TRAVEL TIME, TRUE, VILLAGES, WILL,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17369213/promoting-womens-economic-participation-india
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/17013
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spelling dig-okr-10986170132024-08-08T14:44:04Z Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India Kerr, William Ghani, Ejaz O'Connell, Stephen D. ACCESS TO EDUCATION AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES CITIES DISCRIMINATION DISTRICTS ECONOMIC BENEFITS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT EMPOWERMENT FAMILIES FEMALE FEMALE EMPLOYMENT FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS FEMALE LABOR FEMALE LABOR FORCE FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION FEMALE LITERACY GENDER GENDER BALANCE GENDER COMPOSITION GENDER DISPARITIES GENDER EQUALITY GENDER GAP GENDER IMBALANCES INEQUALITY INFORMAL SECTOR LABOR FORCE LABOR LAWS LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKETS LAND TRANSPORT LITERACY LOCAL INPUT LOCAL TRANSPORT MOBILITY MOTOR VEHICLES OCCUPATIONS POACHING POPULATION DENSITY PRODUCTIVITY ROADS ROLE OF WOMEN SAFETY SANITATION SEX SEX RATIO TRANSPORT TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION COSTS TRAVEL TIME TRUE VILLAGES WILL Despite rapid economic growth, gender disparities in women's economic participation have remained deep and persistent in India. What explains these gender disparities? Is it poor infrastructure, limited education, or the composition of the labor force and industries? Or is it deficiencies in social and business networks and a low share of incumbent female entrepreneurs? This note analyzes the spatial determinants of female entrepreneurship in India in the manufacturing and services sectors. It finds that good infrastructure and education predict higher female entry shares. Gender networks also influence women's economic participation, as strong agglomeration economies exist in both manufacturing and services. A higher female ownership among incumbent businesses within a district-industry predicts a greater share of subsequent female entrepreneurs. Moreover, higher female ownership of local businesses in related industries (similar labor needs, input-output markets) predicts greater relative female entry rates. Unlocking female empowerment and entrepreneurship is a direct path to shared prosperity and a more dynamic and sustainable growth. 2014-02-12T16:01:21Z 2014-02-12T16:01:21Z 2013-02 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17369213/promoting-womens-economic-participation-india https://hdl.handle.net/10986/17013 English en_US Economic premise;no. 107 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ACCESS TO EDUCATION
AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
CITIES
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRICTS
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EMPOWERMENT
FAMILIES
FEMALE
FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
FEMALE LITERACY
GENDER
GENDER BALANCE
GENDER COMPOSITION
GENDER DISPARITIES
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
GENDER IMBALANCES
INEQUALITY
INFORMAL SECTOR
LABOR FORCE
LABOR LAWS
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LAND TRANSPORT
LITERACY
LOCAL INPUT
LOCAL TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
MOTOR VEHICLES
OCCUPATIONS
POACHING
POPULATION DENSITY
PRODUCTIVITY
ROADS
ROLE OF WOMEN
SAFETY
SANITATION
SEX
SEX RATIO
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION COSTS
TRAVEL TIME
TRUE
VILLAGES
WILL
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
CITIES
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRICTS
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EMPOWERMENT
FAMILIES
FEMALE
FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
FEMALE LITERACY
GENDER
GENDER BALANCE
GENDER COMPOSITION
GENDER DISPARITIES
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
GENDER IMBALANCES
INEQUALITY
INFORMAL SECTOR
LABOR FORCE
LABOR LAWS
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LAND TRANSPORT
LITERACY
LOCAL INPUT
LOCAL TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
MOTOR VEHICLES
OCCUPATIONS
POACHING
POPULATION DENSITY
PRODUCTIVITY
ROADS
ROLE OF WOMEN
SAFETY
SANITATION
SEX
SEX RATIO
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION COSTS
TRAVEL TIME
TRUE
VILLAGES
WILL
spellingShingle ACCESS TO EDUCATION
AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
CITIES
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRICTS
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EMPOWERMENT
FAMILIES
FEMALE
FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
FEMALE LITERACY
GENDER
GENDER BALANCE
GENDER COMPOSITION
GENDER DISPARITIES
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
GENDER IMBALANCES
INEQUALITY
INFORMAL SECTOR
LABOR FORCE
LABOR LAWS
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LAND TRANSPORT
LITERACY
LOCAL INPUT
LOCAL TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
MOTOR VEHICLES
OCCUPATIONS
POACHING
POPULATION DENSITY
PRODUCTIVITY
ROADS
ROLE OF WOMEN
SAFETY
SANITATION
SEX
SEX RATIO
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION COSTS
TRAVEL TIME
TRUE
VILLAGES
WILL
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
CITIES
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRICTS
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EMPOWERMENT
FAMILIES
FEMALE
FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
FEMALE LITERACY
GENDER
GENDER BALANCE
GENDER COMPOSITION
GENDER DISPARITIES
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
GENDER IMBALANCES
INEQUALITY
INFORMAL SECTOR
LABOR FORCE
LABOR LAWS
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LAND TRANSPORT
LITERACY
LOCAL INPUT
LOCAL TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
MOTOR VEHICLES
OCCUPATIONS
POACHING
POPULATION DENSITY
PRODUCTIVITY
ROADS
ROLE OF WOMEN
SAFETY
SANITATION
SEX
SEX RATIO
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION COSTS
TRAVEL TIME
TRUE
VILLAGES
WILL
Kerr, William
Ghani, Ejaz
O'Connell, Stephen D.
Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
description Despite rapid economic growth, gender disparities in women's economic participation have remained deep and persistent in India. What explains these gender disparities? Is it poor infrastructure, limited education, or the composition of the labor force and industries? Or is it deficiencies in social and business networks and a low share of incumbent female entrepreneurs? This note analyzes the spatial determinants of female entrepreneurship in India in the manufacturing and services sectors. It finds that good infrastructure and education predict higher female entry shares. Gender networks also influence women's economic participation, as strong agglomeration economies exist in both manufacturing and services. A higher female ownership among incumbent businesses within a district-industry predicts a greater share of subsequent female entrepreneurs. Moreover, higher female ownership of local businesses in related industries (similar labor needs, input-output markets) predicts greater relative female entry rates. Unlocking female empowerment and entrepreneurship is a direct path to shared prosperity and a more dynamic and sustainable growth.
topic_facet ACCESS TO EDUCATION
AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
CITIES
DISCRIMINATION
DISTRICTS
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
EMPOWERMENT
FAMILIES
FEMALE
FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
FEMALE LABOR
FEMALE LABOR FORCE
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
FEMALE LITERACY
GENDER
GENDER BALANCE
GENDER COMPOSITION
GENDER DISPARITIES
GENDER EQUALITY
GENDER GAP
GENDER IMBALANCES
INEQUALITY
INFORMAL SECTOR
LABOR FORCE
LABOR LAWS
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LAND TRANSPORT
LITERACY
LOCAL INPUT
LOCAL TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
MOTOR VEHICLES
OCCUPATIONS
POACHING
POPULATION DENSITY
PRODUCTIVITY
ROADS
ROLE OF WOMEN
SAFETY
SANITATION
SEX
SEX RATIO
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORTATION
TRANSPORTATION COSTS
TRAVEL TIME
TRUE
VILLAGES
WILL
author Kerr, William
Ghani, Ejaz
O'Connell, Stephen D.
author_facet Kerr, William
Ghani, Ejaz
O'Connell, Stephen D.
author_sort Kerr, William
title Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
title_short Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
title_full Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
title_fullStr Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
title_full_unstemmed Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India
title_sort promoting women's economic participation in india
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2013-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17369213/promoting-womens-economic-participation-india
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/17013
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AT ghaniejaz promotingwomenseconomicparticipationinindia
AT oconnellstephend promotingwomenseconomicparticipationinindia
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