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Access to Infrastructure and Women's Time Allocation: Evidence and a Framework for Policy Analysis
Publisher: FONDATION POUR LES ETUDES ET RECHERCHES SUR LE DEVELOPPEMENT INTERNATIONAL
Author: Pierre-Richard Agénor and Otaviano Canuto
Type: Report
Date: Avril 2012
Keywords: economic growth, developing countries, productive activities, policy analysis
Location in CRTDA: http://www.ferdi.fr/uploads/sfCmsContent/html/112/P45.pdf
This paper studies the interactions between access to infrastructure, women's time allocation, and
economic growth in developing countries. The first part provides a review of the evidence on the impact of
poor infrastructure on women's ability to allocate their time to productive activities. The second part presents
a quantitative framework for policy analysis, in the form of a gender-based, computable overlapping
generations (OLG) model of economic growth that captures these interactions as well as of inter- and intragenerational health externalities. The model is then calibrated for a low-income country (Benin) and used to
quantify the impact of a policy aimed at improving access to infrastructure on women's time allocation,
growth and education and health outcomes. Implications of the analysis for strengthening the role of women
in the growth process in developing economies are also discussed.
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