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Julie Babinard , World Bank Kinnon Scott, World Bank

What Can Existing Household Surveys Tell Us about Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries?. Julie Babinard , World Bank Kinnon Scott, World Bank. Transport, Development and Women.

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Julie Babinard , World Bank Kinnon Scott, World Bank

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  1. What Can Existing Household Surveys Tell Us about Gender and Transportation in Developing Countries? Julie Babinard, World Bank Kinnon Scott, World Bank

  2. Transport, Development and Women • Access to affordable, reliable and safe transport is critical element for economic growth and poverty reduction • Transport planning typically not addressing differences in men and women travel needs • Social and economic roles of women: • Earnings opportunities (jobs, markets ) • Household and domestic work (Child-rearing; resources & food) • Access to social and health services

  3. Women’s travel patterns and mobility constraints • Access to fewer transport choices • (Venter et al. 2007; Odufuwa 2007; Srinivasan 2002) • Spend more on transport • (Kamuhanda and Schmidt 2009; Srinavasan 2002) • Complex travel patterns • (Anand and Tiwari 2006; Odufuwa 2005; Abidemi 2002; Rosenbloom 1995; Malmberg-Calvo 1994; Hanson and Hanson 1980;) • Quality and security concerns • (Okoko 2007)

  4. Knowledge and data gapsin gender and transport • Access to transport by women • Affordability • Journey length and reasons for travel • Quality of transport • How to fill in the gaps?

  5. Data sources • “Stand alone” surveys of transport users or households • Costly to carry out • Often one-off (not part of any system of data collection in a country) • Urban • National household surveys • Many countries carry out a range of surveys • Comparable across time, or across countries • Can existing household surveys in developing countries inform transportation policy?

  6. National Household Surveys • Variety of surveys are carried out • Selection criteria: • Frequency of implementation (across countries and across time) • Data collected at the individual level • Our assessment, a priori, of potential usefulness

  7. National Household Surveys • Living Standards Measurement Study Surveys (LSMS) • Income and Expenditure /Household Budget Surveys (IES/HBS) • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS

  8. Living Standards Measurement Study Surveys (LSMS) • Goal  new, better quality data for public policy research on household behavior, household-policy interactions • Focus on welfare- (multi-topic) --causes • Data on individuals and households • Complementary data on community, prices, facilities

  9. National Household Surveys • Living Standards Measurement Study Surveys (LSMS) • Income and Expenditure /Household Budget Surveys (IES/HBS) • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS

  10. Income and Expenditure/ Household Budget Surveys (IES/HBS) • Goal household expenditures, weights for consumer price indices, inputs for national accounts • Some demographics, education and employment data • Data are always collected at the household level • Some contain individual expenditure diaries. • Frequent: annually in Eastern Europe, every five years in other parts Latin America, for ex.

  11. National Household Surveys • Living Standards Measurement Study Surveys (LSMS) • Income and Expenditure /Household Budget Surveys (IES/HBS) • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS

  12. Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • Goal data for policy on health, primarily maternal and infant health, fertility, family planning, nutrition, assets, education • Data at individual level and household level • Implemented systematically in many developing countries, multiple rounds • Comparable across countries and time

  13. National Household Surveys • Living Standards Measurement Study Surveys (LSMS) • Income and Expenditure /Household Budget Surveys (IES/HBS) • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS)

  14. Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) • Goal monitor progress on the goals adopted at the 1990 World Summit for Children, look at children and their welfare, indicators • Includes topics such as nutrition, child health and mortality, literacy, child protection, etc. • Major international effort- over 100 countries, multiple rounds • Comparability across countries and some add-ons allowed

  15. (1) Transport access and use • LSMS: community level data to paved and unpaved roads; existence of bus service • Caveat: not on individual preference or expenditure  Overall use or demand for individual transport cannot be determined • HBS/IES: individual expenditures on modes of transport; by rural and urban areas • Caveat: may have no disaggregation per trip type or number of trips taken • Inability to assess mode shares and individual demand as (a) costs related to mode use are aggregated ; (b) movements with no immediate expenditures not recorded (walking; bicycle) and (c) expenditures not equal to trips (private vehicles)

  16. (2) Transport affordability • HSB/IES: Individual expenditure data by male and female on transport; type of mode used; number of trips • Caveat: Specific data on number of trips is not always available unless collected in specific individual diaries/’open’ questionnaires  No conclusion can be drawn on whether one form of transport is more or less expensive for men or women

  17. (3) Journey length and reasons for travel • LSMS: Individual data on mode of transport, trip purposes and costs for access to education and health facilities, labor-related activities (but not necessarily across countries)  individual data allows disaggregation of data according to gender and provides reasons for not using health care (distance; lack of transport as options) • DHS: individual data on reasons for not using health care (distance; lack of transport as options) opportunities for geo-referencing with national surveys • MICS: Types of transport and mode owned and used for accessing social and economic activities (education; domestic and household chores – water & food) • Caveat: mainly household data available • Opportunity for custom-questionnaire and questions on reasons for not attending school; not registering children’s birth (distance and travel time as options)

  18. Conclusions • The four survey types provide some information on transport access, affordability, trip purposes • No information on quality or safety • Benefits of the four survey types • National level data sets • Ability to link transport use with welfare status, human capital • Ability to track changes over time for specific groups • Not a substitute for transport specific surveys

  19. Recommendations • Incorporate additional questions to surveys with focus on gender and transport • Systematize questions as much as possible (International Household Survey Network) • Seek IES/HBS data that is disaggregated by expenditure • Investigate existing data sources before designing full transport survey

  20. Additional resources • LSMS http://www.worldbank.org/lsms/ • IES/HBS http://www.measuredhs.com • MICS http://www.unicef.org/statistics/index_24302.html http://www.childinfo.org/mics3_surveys.html

  21. Brazil: Type of expenditure by women and men, Brazil (% of men and women that made each type of expenditure per week) Source: POF 2002/2003, calculations by authors

  22. Mode of Transport to School: Panama 2003 Source: Encuesta de Niveles de Vida,calculations by authors

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