Gender Equality and Growth in Brazil

By experts and staff
- Published
- Gayle Tzemach LemmonAdjunct Senior Fellow for Women and Foreign Policy
Brazil’s starring role among the booming quartet of emerging markets known as the BRICs is well documented: in a decade the number of people in relative poverty has fallen by half and the percentage of those living on $1.25 a day fell from 9.8 percent to 6.1 percent. Low inflation, strong reserves management practices, and robust economic growth have enabled this economic surge.
Yet the less glittery side of the Brazilian story remains: the country came in at a disappointing 130 out of 185 in the 2013 World Bank Doing Business rankings, behind Indonesia and Ethiopia and two spots lower than the previous year. Questions about the quality of secondary education and the adequacy of the country’s infrastructure continue.
Recently the country has hit what the Fitch ratings agency calls a “stumbling block.” The heady economic tailwinds of the past decade have given way to slowing growth as commodity prices decline and exports fall.
One answer in addressing the challenge of long-term growth in Brazil is the promotion of gender equality, according to a newly published World Bank paper. As the IMF recently noted in another paper,
jobs and increased labor force participation, including among women, are important to foster inclusive growth and reduce poverty and income inequality; and social cohesion and job creation can lead to more sustained growth… at the heart of this nexus lies productivity growth—those economies with the highest growth in per capita incomes are also those that have experienced the highest growth in labor productivity by investing in physical and human capital and embracing technological change.
Brazil has made enormous strides in addressing gender disparities. Literacy rates have soared and women now outnumber men in tertiary education. As the World Bank notes, women in the work force now count 8.8 years of schooling, while men have an average of 7.7 years. And the “female to male labor force participation rate increased from 52.2 in 1990 to… 73.3 in 2010.”
Still, however, challenges remain and they hamper economic progress. Brazilian women earn 58 percent of what their male colleagues earn while devoting over 15 hours more each week to housework than men. “Discriminatory practices and social norms” seem to account for the earnings gulf.
World Bank research points to two strategies that could help to address this inequality and to spur economic growth.
The result of these increases is that “fostering gender equality, which may depend significantly on the externalities that infrastructure creates in terms of women’s time allocation and bargaining power, can have a substantial impact on long-run growth in Brazil.“
Few expect that either of these changes will happen in an instant and perhaps even over the longer term. But the benefits to economic growth—and the IMF’s goal of “inclusive growth”—of enhancing women’s ability to participate in their economy and to get paid for doing so show up in the numbers.