The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines

The evidence presented in this thesis supports the view that men and women participate in the labour force in qualitatively distinct ways and that, as a result, policies to increase female employment in the formal economy have an impact on economic development that is quite different from those whos...

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Main Author: Bahramitash, Roksana.
Other Authors: Smith, Micheal (advisor)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: McGill University 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=36872
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.368722014-02-13T04:03:51ZThe role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the PhilippinesBahramitash, Roksana.Women in development -- Taiwan.Women in development -- Indonesia.Women in development -- Philippines.The evidence presented in this thesis supports the view that men and women participate in the labour force in qualitatively distinct ways and that, as a result, policies to increase female employment in the formal economy have an impact on economic development that is quite different from those whose aim is simply to increase employment with no regard to its gender composition. While it is well known that women's work is often underreported and undercounted, the thesis contends that women's "work" is also frequently defined incorrectly. From the point of view of development policy it is necessary to define women's work as embracing not only "productive" labour done for monetary gain, but also reproductive and volunteer work which, though not directly remunerated, have important feedbacks on other social, political and economic variables. Those feedbacks in turn may determine the success or failure of a particular "development" strategy.This theory is applied to three "Asian miracle" developing countries, chosen because of their widely varied cultural, political and economic history and structures. The methodology employed is eclectic. Too often social research is bogged down in disputes between those who favour quantitative and those who favour historical-institutional analysis. In reality, especially when dealing with developing countries where there are serious problems of data quality, these two approaches can be mutually complementary. Therefore, in undertaking a comparative study of three cases, the thesis employs quantitative, historical-institutional and anthropological data along with information derived from interviews and field work.The thesis demonstrates ample support for the hypothesis that women's labour has an importance over and above simply more hands at work, that the particular characteristics of female labour, not only produce direct payoffs in terms of development of certain types of manufacturing industries, but many indirect ones in terms of social variables like reduced fertility, increased life expectancy and greater educational attainment. However it also demonstrates that full actualization of these benefits in terms of economic prosperity, improved social welfare, and ultimately political democratization requires a state that is both willing and able (two distinct things) to implement social and economic policies designed explicitly to promote female employment in the formal economy.McGill UniversitySmith, Micheal (advisor)2000Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: 001810372proquestno: NQ69968Theses scanned by UMI/ProQuest.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Doctor of Philosophy (Department of Sociology.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=36872
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language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Women in development -- Taiwan.
Women in development -- Indonesia.
Women in development -- Philippines.
spellingShingle Women in development -- Taiwan.
Women in development -- Indonesia.
Women in development -- Philippines.
Bahramitash, Roksana.
The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
description The evidence presented in this thesis supports the view that men and women participate in the labour force in qualitatively distinct ways and that, as a result, policies to increase female employment in the formal economy have an impact on economic development that is quite different from those whose aim is simply to increase employment with no regard to its gender composition. While it is well known that women's work is often underreported and undercounted, the thesis contends that women's "work" is also frequently defined incorrectly. From the point of view of development policy it is necessary to define women's work as embracing not only "productive" labour done for monetary gain, but also reproductive and volunteer work which, though not directly remunerated, have important feedbacks on other social, political and economic variables. Those feedbacks in turn may determine the success or failure of a particular "development" strategy. === This theory is applied to three "Asian miracle" developing countries, chosen because of their widely varied cultural, political and economic history and structures. The methodology employed is eclectic. Too often social research is bogged down in disputes between those who favour quantitative and those who favour historical-institutional analysis. In reality, especially when dealing with developing countries where there are serious problems of data quality, these two approaches can be mutually complementary. Therefore, in undertaking a comparative study of three cases, the thesis employs quantitative, historical-institutional and anthropological data along with information derived from interviews and field work. === The thesis demonstrates ample support for the hypothesis that women's labour has an importance over and above simply more hands at work, that the particular characteristics of female labour, not only produce direct payoffs in terms of development of certain types of manufacturing industries, but many indirect ones in terms of social variables like reduced fertility, increased life expectancy and greater educational attainment. However it also demonstrates that full actualization of these benefits in terms of economic prosperity, improved social welfare, and ultimately political democratization requires a state that is both willing and able (two distinct things) to implement social and economic policies designed explicitly to promote female employment in the formal economy.
author2 Smith, Micheal (advisor)
author_facet Smith, Micheal (advisor)
Bahramitash, Roksana.
author Bahramitash, Roksana.
author_sort Bahramitash, Roksana.
title The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
title_short The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
title_full The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
title_fullStr The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed The role of women in economic development : case studies of Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines
title_sort role of women in economic development : case studies of taiwan, indonesia and the philippines
publisher McGill University
publishDate 2000
url http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=36872
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