女性生殖器割礼是撒哈拉以南非洲收入不平等的驱动因素吗?来自尼日利亚的证据

IF 0.4 Q4 ECONOMICS Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics Pub Date : 2023-10-14 DOI:10.1177/02601079231162467
Kazeem B. Ajide, Juliet U. Elu, Gregory N. Price
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究考虑了尼日利亚女性生殖器割礼(FGC)对家庭收入不平等的影响。就女性生殖器切割对健康产生不利影响而言,它可能降低女性的劳动生产率和相对于男性的收入。从理论上讲,我们在一个简单的博弈论家庭规范谈判框架中激发我们的研究,在这个框架中,有几个可能的平衡是基于代表性男性要求FGC的决定,以及代表性女性接受或不接受FGC的决定。我们将来自非洲晴雨表调查的尼日利亚区域数据与尼日利亚现有的区域FGC监测数据联系起来,用序数Logit规范估计区域FGC率对家庭在收入分配中的地位的影响。我们的参数估计表明,随着一个地区女儿与母亲生殖器割礼比例的增加,家庭处于较低收入十分之一的几率也会增加。女性生殖器切割效应与女性生殖器切割选择的性别讨价还价的政治经济学是一致的,在这种政治经济学中,男性在治理/管理家庭方面比女性拥有更多的讨价还价能力。我们的研究结果表明,任何根除FGC的政策干预,包括影响议价政治经济学的干预,至少可以使男性和女性之间的议价能力平等,都可以减少撒哈拉以南非洲地区的家庭收入不平等。耶利米书:14、18、16、15、13
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Is Female Genital Circumcision a Driver of Income Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa? Evidence from Nigeria
This study considers the effects of female genital circumcision (FGC) on household income inequality in Nigeria. To the extent that FGC has adverse health consequences, it can lower female labour productivity and earnings relative to males. Theoretically, we motivate our inquiry within a simple game-theoretic household norm bargaining framework in which there are several possible equilibria based on the decisions of representative males to require FGC, and representative females accepting, or not. We link regional data on Nigeria from the Afrobarometer survey to existing regional FGC surveillance data in Nigeria to estimate with Ordinal Logit specifications, the effect of regional FGC rates on a household’s position in the income distribution. Our parameter estimates reveal that as the ratio of daughter to mother genital circumcision increases in a region, the odds of a household being in the lower income decile increases. The FGC effects are consistent with a political economy of gender bargaining about FGC choices in which males have more bargaining power in governing/managing the household relative to females. Our results suggest that any policy intervention that eradicates FGC, including interventions that affect a political economy of bargaining that at least equalises bargaining power between males and females, could reduce household income inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa. JEL: I14, I18, J16, O5, Z13
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