Measuring ownership and control over assets
There is a rich and growing body of research on measuring women's and men’s ownership and control over assets. Research includes findings from the Gender Asset Gap Project (opens in a new tab)(see this study (opens in a new tab)), the Evidence and Data for Gender Equality (EDGE)(opens in a new tab) initiative managed by the United Nations Statistics Division and UN Women (see Guidelines for Producing Statistics on Asset Ownership from a Gender Perspective)(opens in a new tab), and the World Bank study in Uganda Methodological Experiment on Measuring Asset Ownership from a Gender Perspective (MEXA).(opens in a new tab)
Measuring women’s and men’s work
The new international statistical standards have important implications for measuring the activities that women and men undertake. They make a clear distinction between “employment” which is defined as work performed for pay or profit and “work” which includes household chores and production for own consumption. The Women's Work and Employment Partnership (WWEP)(opens in a new tab) is a joint effort of the World Bank, the International Labour Organization (ILO)(opens in a new tab), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)(opens in a new tab), and Data 2X(opens in a new tab). The WWEP is focused on operationalizing new international definitions of work and employment that recognize all productive activities, paid and unpaid. These new definitions -approved at the 19th International Conference of Labor Statisticians (ICLS)(opens in a new tab) - have major implications for how women's work is measured. The results will inform the formulation of guidelines for the measurement of employment, unemployment, and labor underutilization in household surveys.
The World Bank conducted methodological experiments and piloted data collection in Ghana ( see working paper(opens in a new tab)) and Malawi to inform the operationalization of the new standards. The World Bank also completed a methodological study(opens in a new tab) in Sri Lanka (jointly with the ILO and the Sri Lanka Department of Census and Statistics(opens in a new tab)) to help solve persistent measurement problems.
The World Bank is also conducting research on improving the measurement of individual and poverty. A summary of this work can be found in chapter 5 of the 2018 Poverty and Shared Prosperity Report(opens in a new tab). In addition, the World Bank will test traditional recall- and diary-based methods to collect time use data using household survey experiments.
The Strengthening Gender Statistics Project
The Strengthening Gender Statistics (SGS) project(opens in a new tab) provides technical assistance to National Statistics Offices in low-income IDA-eligible economies to improve the availability, quality, and use of gender data. With respect to the methodological advances in measuring women’s economic empowerment from the aforementioned partnerships and initiatives, the SGS project distilled the latest recommendations from the various reports produced by LSMS+ and WWEP into a guidance note(opens in a new tab) for NSOs to more easily operationalize them in ongoing and future survey operations. To complement the guidance note, the SGS project also provides targeted advice to survey design and implementation protocols within each economies specific survey context as well as economy-trailored data analysis and dissemination training.