Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research

The study in Togo reveals that psychology-based entrepreneur training (personal initiative training) increases firm profits by 30 percent, compared to a statistically insignificant increase for traditional business training. Personal initiative training was particularly effective for female-owned businesses, who saw their profits increase by 40 percent, compared to no impact from traditional business training. Getting more women into traditionally male-dominated sectors of the economy could boost the incomes of women entrepreneurs and their households. Our study in Ethiopia revealed that firms owned by women who cross over into male-dominated sectors are two times more profitable than firms owned by women who remain in traditionally female sectors, and they are just as profitable as businesses owned by men. Women are more likely to cross-over when parents and husbands support them and when they have access to information on the higher earnings potential in male-dominated sectors.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2017-10
Subjects:TEACHER INITIATIVE, WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS, LIFE SKILLS, ADOLESCENT GIRLS, GENDER, ICT, ACCESS TO FINANCE, FINANCIAL LITERACY, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, GENDER GAP, CASH CROPS, NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS, LAND RIGHTS, WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE, WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS, WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS, WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT, AFRICA GENDER POLICY, GENDER INNOVATION LAB,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/391921507319043537/Top-policy-lessons-from-Africa-Gender-Innovation-Lab-research
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28480
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spelling dig-okr-10986284802024-08-07T19:35:31Z Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research World Bank TEACHER INITIATIVE WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS LIFE SKILLS ADOLESCENT GIRLS GENDER ICT ACCESS TO FINANCE FINANCIAL LITERACY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY GENDER GAP CASH CROPS NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS LAND RIGHTS WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT AFRICA GENDER POLICY GENDER INNOVATION LAB The study in Togo reveals that psychology-based entrepreneur training (personal initiative training) increases firm profits by 30 percent, compared to a statistically insignificant increase for traditional business training. Personal initiative training was particularly effective for female-owned businesses, who saw their profits increase by 40 percent, compared to no impact from traditional business training. Getting more women into traditionally male-dominated sectors of the economy could boost the incomes of women entrepreneurs and their households. Our study in Ethiopia revealed that firms owned by women who cross over into male-dominated sectors are two times more profitable than firms owned by women who remain in traditionally female sectors, and they are just as profitable as businesses owned by men. Women are more likely to cross-over when parents and husbands support them and when they have access to information on the higher earnings potential in male-dominated sectors. 2017-10-10T14:41:50Z 2017-10-10T14:41:50Z 2017-10 Brief Fiche Resumen http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/391921507319043537/Top-policy-lessons-from-Africa-Gender-Innovation-Lab-research https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28480 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain application/pdf 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 TEACHER INITIATIVE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
LIFE SKILLS
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
GENDER
ICT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
FINANCIAL LITERACY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER GAP
CASH CROPS
NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS
LAND RIGHTS
WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS
WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
TEACHER INITIATIVE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
LIFE SKILLS
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
GENDER
ICT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
FINANCIAL LITERACY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER GAP
CASH CROPS
NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS
LAND RIGHTS
WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS
WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
spellingShingle TEACHER INITIATIVE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
LIFE SKILLS
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
GENDER
ICT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
FINANCIAL LITERACY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER GAP
CASH CROPS
NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS
LAND RIGHTS
WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS
WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
TEACHER INITIATIVE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
LIFE SKILLS
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
GENDER
ICT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
FINANCIAL LITERACY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER GAP
CASH CROPS
NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS
LAND RIGHTS
WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS
WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
World Bank
Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
description The study in Togo reveals that psychology-based entrepreneur training (personal initiative training) increases firm profits by 30 percent, compared to a statistically insignificant increase for traditional business training. Personal initiative training was particularly effective for female-owned businesses, who saw their profits increase by 40 percent, compared to no impact from traditional business training. Getting more women into traditionally male-dominated sectors of the economy could boost the incomes of women entrepreneurs and their households. Our study in Ethiopia revealed that firms owned by women who cross over into male-dominated sectors are two times more profitable than firms owned by women who remain in traditionally female sectors, and they are just as profitable as businesses owned by men. Women are more likely to cross-over when parents and husbands support them and when they have access to information on the higher earnings potential in male-dominated sectors.
format Brief
topic_facet TEACHER INITIATIVE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
LIFE SKILLS
ADOLESCENT GIRLS
GENDER
ICT
ACCESS TO FINANCE
FINANCIAL LITERACY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
GENDER GAP
CASH CROPS
NONCOGNITIVE SKILLS
LAND RIGHTS
WOMEN AND AGRICULTURE
WOMEN AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
WOMEN AND PROPERTY RIGHTS
WOMEN AND SOCIAL NORMS
WOMEN AND YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
title_short Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
title_full Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
title_fullStr Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
title_full_unstemmed Top Policy Lessons from Africa Gender Innovation Lab Research
title_sort top policy lessons from africa gender innovation lab research
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2017-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/391921507319043537/Top-policy-lessons-from-Africa-Gender-Innovation-Lab-research
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28480
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank toppolicylessonsfromafricagenderinnovationlabresearch
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