« Back to Results

Gender and Development

Paper Session

Friday, Jan. 3, 2025 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (PST)

Hilton San Francisco Union Square
Hosted By: Econometric Society
  • Chair: Tom Vogl, University of California-San Diego

The Good Wife? Reputation Dynamics and Financial Decision-Making Inside the Household

Nina Buchmann
,
Yale University
Pascaline Dupas
,
Stanford University
Roberta Ziparo
,
University of Aix-Marseille

Abstract

We study reputation dynamics within the household in a setting where women regularly receive transfers from their husbands for household purchases. We propose a signaling model in which wives try to maintain a good reputation in the eyes of their husbands to receive high transfers. This leads them to (a) avoid risky purchases (goods with unknown returns); and (b) knowingly over-use low-return goods to hide bad purchase decisions - we call this the intra-household sunk cost effect. We present supportive evidence for the model from a series of experiments with married couples in rural Malawi.

Family Planning, Now and Later: Infertility Fears and Contraceptive Take-Up

Natalie Bau
,
University of California-Los Angeles
David Henning
,
University of California-Los Angeles
Corinne Low
,
University of Pennsylvania
Bryce Millett Steinberg
,
Brown University

Abstract

Early fertility is thought to be one of the key barriers to female human capital attainment in sub-Saharan Africa, yet contraceptive take-up remains puzzlingly low, even among highly-educated populations with healthcare access. We study a barrier to hormonal contraceptive uptake that has not yet been examined in the economic literature: the persistent (incorrect) belief that these contraceptives may cause later infertility. This belief creates a perceived tradeoff between current and future reproductive control. We use a randomized controlled trial with female undergraduates at the flagship university in Zambia -- a highly-skilled population where education is likely to have particularly high returns -- to test two potential interventions to increase contraceptive use. Despite high rates of sexual activity and low rates of condom-use, only 5% of this population uses hormonal contraceptives at baseline. Providing a non-coercive conditional cash transfer to visit a local clinic temporarily increases contraceptive use. However, pairing this transfer with information addressing fears that contraceptives cause infertility persistently increases take-up over 6 months. The latter treatment moves beliefs about the infertility effects of contraceptives and leads to the take-up of longer-lasting contraceptives like injections. Compliers are more likely to cite fear of infertility as the reason for not using contraceptives at baseline. IV estimates indicate that eliminating the belief that contraceptives cause infertility would triple contraceptive use.

When Pure Access Does Not Breed Use

Manisha Shah
,
University of California-Berkeley
Jennifer Muz
,
University of California-Irvine
Gabriela Rubio
,
University of California-Davis

Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest adolescent birth rates globally, alongside some of the highest rates of unmet need for modern contraception. This paper evaluates the impact of a randomized controlled trial that offers adolescent females free modern contraceptives (implants, intrauterine devices, injectables, pills, condoms, female condom) on contraceptive use and pregnancy among adolescent females. Contraceptives were distributed by nurses at pre-existing adolescent clubs every other month between April 2017 and January 2018. We estimate a null treatment effect from this supply side treatment. We explore dimensions of heterogeneity in treatment effects according to dimensions cited in the literature and find little evidence of heterogeneous treatment effects. We conclude that providing access to contraceptives alone is not sufficient to increase adolescent contraceptive use; instead, programs should combine supply-side interventions with programming that targets knowledge and norms.

The Mental Health Effects of Access to Contraception

Nava Ashraf
,
London School of Economics
Marric Buessing
,
Boston University
Erica Field
,
Duke University
Jessica Leight
,
IFPRI
Alessandra Voena
,
Stanford University

Abstract

Depression and anxiety constitute leading contributors to the global burden of disease.1 Depression has substantial economic consequences, resulting in work absence, lower pro- ductivity, and worse outcomes for children of depressed individuals (Baingana et al., 2006; Dole, 2003; Nasreen et al., 2010). Economic development can also impact mental health, although this direction of the relationship is less understood (e.g. Cohen et al., eds, 2002). In particular, the economic factors able to decrease depression or anxiety may vary by gender, as women suffer disproportionately from depression even after accounting for differences in diagnosis rates (Nolen-Hoeksema, 2001; Piccinelli and Wilkinson, 2000). Explanations for this disparity usually focus on consequences of women’s lower social status, including domestic violence, discrimination, and excessive responsibilities within the household (Baingana et al., 2006; Gomel, 1997; Nolen-Hoeksema, 2001). This study, however, considers a largely unexplored determinant: a woman’s control over her own fertility outcomes. Women in developing countries face significant challenges in accessing family planning services and, more generally, controlling their own fertility. We posit that this inability to reliably manage fertility may constitute an important source of mental stress and anxiety.

Discussant(s)
Rachel Heath
,
University of Washington
Anne Karing
,
University of Chicago
Simone Gabrielle Schaner
,
University of Southern California
Bilge Erten
,
Northeastern University
JEL Classifications
  • O1 - Economic Development
  • J1 - Demographic Economics