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Abstract
Recent research has shown that improving women’s decisionmaking power
relative to men’s within households leads to improvements in a variety of well-being
outcomes for children. In South Asia, where the influence of women’s power is
particularly strong, these outcomes include children’s nutritional status and the quality of
feeding and health care practices. Focusing on nutritional status, this paper presents the
results of a study investigating whether increases in women’s power have a stronger
positive influence on the nutritional status of their daughters than their sons. If so, then
increasing women’s power not only improves the well-being of children as a group, but
also serves as a force to reduce long-standing discrimination that undermines female
capabilities in many important areas of life as well as human and economic development
in general. To investigate this issue, the study draws on Demographic and Health Survey
data collected during the 1990s in four countries: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and
Pakistan. The main empirical technique employed is multivariate regression analysis
with statistical tests for significant differences in effects for girl and boy children. A total
of 30,334 women and 33,316 children under three years old are included in the analysis.
The study concludes that, for the South Asia region as a whole, an increase in women’s
decisionmaking power relative to men’s, if substantial, would be an effective force for
reducing discrimination against girl children. However, this finding is not applicable in
all countries and for all areas and age groups of children. Indeed the study finds evidence
that in some areas, for instance the northern and western states of India as a group,
increasing women’s power would lead to a worsening of gender discrimination against
girls. This is likely the result of deeply embedded son preference associated with highly
patriarchal social systems. The lesson for policymakers and development practitioners is
that while increasing women’s power is likely to improve the well-being of children, in
some geographical areas it will not necessarily diminish discrimination against girls,
which violates human rights and undermines the region’s economic development and the
health of its population. In these areas, to overcome son preference, economic returns to girls will have to be increased and efforts to change customs regarding marriage and
inheritance associated with patriarchal kinship systems, which favor males, will have to
be made.