Gender Budgeting in South Asia

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Posted by Teresa Curristine[1] and Udaya Pant[2]

The first IMF Asian regional workshop on gender budgeting (GB) was held in India in March 2018. Twenty-eight delegates from ten Asian countries participated (Bangladesh, Bhutan, Korea India, Indonesia, Maldives, Nepal, Philippines Sri Lanka and Thailand) as well as representatives from six Indian states. The workshop brought together representatives of ministries of finance, ministries of women, and spending ministries. It was organized by the IMF’s South Asia Regional Training and Technical Assistance Center (SARTTAC) and its Fiscal Affairs Department (FAD) in collaboration with the Fund’s Technical Assistance Office in Thailand (TAOLAM) and the UN Women’s India Office.

The workshop included presentations from international experts on GB concepts and approaches, international trends in GB, and on how GB can contribute to achieving gender equality and the sustainable development goals (IMF and UN women). It emphasized international and regional country case studies and peer to peer learning. The workshop also included presentations on lessons learned from countries with more advanced systems of GB and gender mainstreaming such as Austria, Korea and the Philippines.

There were several sessions on the several GB tools which can be used to integrate a gender perspective throughout the budget cycle. Regional country cases studies were used to illustrate how these tools can be applied in budget preparation and execution. Country presentations discussed integrating a gender perspective into planning and budget documents (Bhutan and Sri Lanka), the budget circular (Bangladesh), and developing GB statements and gender analysis (Korea and the Philippines). Countries also discussed applying a gender perspective to budget execution, monitoring and reporting (Nepal and Indonesia).

The workshop provided participants with the opportunity to apply what they had learned to their own countries. In the breakout sessions, participants either developed a GB statement for their country or improved their country’s existing statement. Others learned how to conduct gender budgeting analysis (ex-ante and ex-post). In addition, participants produced a GB action plan for their respective countries. The results of these sessions were presented and discussed with the peer group.

Some of the key messages emerging from the seminar include:

The workshop discussed the challenges countries faced in implementing GB. These included lack of political support, lack of clear guidance on incorporating gender considerations into the budget, insufficient disaggregated data, coordination problems, and the poor quality of gender assessments.

The workshop also highlighted important success factors such as having an adequate legal framework for implementing GB, political support to improve gender equality, commitment from the finance ministry, capacity for undertaking gender analysis, and strong awareness among line ministries of their role in implementing GB.

[1] Deputy Division Chief, PFM 2 Division, Fiscal Affairs Department, IMF.

[2] Resident PFM Advisor, SARTTAC.

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