Author ORCID Identifier

Margaret Boittin: 0000-0002-5196-7102

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-2023

Publisher

International Food Policy Research Institute

City

Washington, DC

Abstract

Do individuals' perceptions of their relative economic status affect their attitudes regarding gender roles in patriarchal societies? What role does hearing messages designed to increase support for women's empowerment play in moderating these effects? Leveraging an original survey experiment in Nepal, we find that a prime conferring feelings of relative deprivation causes women to revert to traditional views of gender in economic decision-making; they become less supportive of women having equal control over household income, sharing household chores with men, and working outside the home. Women's empowerment messaging does not attenuate these effects. Priming men to feel relatively deprived causes declines in gender- equitable economic and political views, but women's empowerment messaging nullifies these effects. The results suggest that among populations feeling relatively deprived, regressive gender norms may take hold. However, light-touch efforts to spur support for women's empowerment may counter some reversion to traditional views of gender.

Comments

"IFPRI Discussion Paper 02211"

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