Description

Book Synopsis
This study focuses on gender differences and their implications for household decision making in terms of production, consumption, fertility and the measurement of welfare. Using econometric approaches, the study reveals that different preferences as well as unequal access to resources determine the outcomes of household decisions. However, preferences and responses to inequality are not static but change depending on risk behavior and the institutional setting as demonstrated with examples from agricultural production and household demand for consumption goods. The means to translate preferences into actual demand depend on the bargaining power married women have in household decision making. Furthermore, the results reveal that apparent gender differences in terms of demand lead to an identification problem of adult equivalence scales, when these are estimated using demand data.

Table of Contents
Contents: One size fits all? Female headed households and access to resources in Kenya – Bargaining over Fertility in Rural Ethiopia – Patterns of consumption and child welfare in female headed households in Tanzania – Food demand, female headed households, and the estimation of equivalence scales.

The Economics of Gender and the Household in

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    A Paperback / softback by Joachim von Braun, Holger Seebens

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      View other formats and editions of The Economics of Gender and the Household in by Joachim von Braun

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 29/12/2008
      ISBN13: 9783631546499, 978-3631546499
      ISBN10: 3631546491

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This study focuses on gender differences and their implications for household decision making in terms of production, consumption, fertility and the measurement of welfare. Using econometric approaches, the study reveals that different preferences as well as unequal access to resources determine the outcomes of household decisions. However, preferences and responses to inequality are not static but change depending on risk behavior and the institutional setting as demonstrated with examples from agricultural production and household demand for consumption goods. The means to translate preferences into actual demand depend on the bargaining power married women have in household decision making. Furthermore, the results reveal that apparent gender differences in terms of demand lead to an identification problem of adult equivalence scales, when these are estimated using demand data.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: One size fits all? Female headed households and access to resources in Kenya – Bargaining over Fertility in Rural Ethiopia – Patterns of consumption and child welfare in female headed households in Tanzania – Food demand, female headed households, and the estimation of equivalence scales.

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