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An Introduction to Gender Budgeting and the Experience of the UK Women’s Budget Group

An Introduction to Gender Budgeting and the Experience of the UK Women’s Budget Group. Swedish Ministry of Finance Stockholm, Sweden October 8, 2004 9-12pm. UK Women’s Budget Group. About the the WBG Working with Government. What is gender budgeting?. Not a separate budget for women

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An Introduction to Gender Budgeting and the Experience of the UK Women’s Budget Group

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  1. An Introduction to Gender Budgeting and the Experience of the UK Women’s Budget Group Swedish Ministry of Finance Stockholm, Sweden October 8, 2004 9-12pm

  2. UK Women’s Budget Group • About the the WBG • Working with Government

  3. What is gender budgeting? • Nota separate budget for women • Analysing any form of public expenditure, or method of raising public money, from a gender perspective • A tool for testing a government’s gender mainstreaming commitments

  4. Why do gender budgeting? • Policy affects women and men differently due to the existing pattern of gender inequalities • Evaluate the impact on the unpaid economy as well as paid economy

  5. Aims of gender budgeting • To integrate a gender analysis into economic policy • To promote greater accountability for government’s commitment to gender equality • To change budgets and policies

  6. Benefits of gender budgeting • Reducing socio-economic gender inequalities • Improving policy efficiency • Internal benefits for governments

  7. Policy areas covered: • Public spending and revenue • National budget • Gender machinery of government

  8. How to do gender budgeting • Evolving concept and practice • Auditing revenue and expenditure • Toolkits • Stages in the budget cycle • Gender budget statements

  9. UK Examples Case Study - New Deal for the Unemployed • Flagship government scheme • 57% to young unemployed; 23% long term unemployed; 8% to lone parents; 12% other N.D.s BUT • N.D. Young People - 72% men and 28% women • N.D. Long Term Unemployed - 84% men and 16% women • N.D. for Lone 95% women

  10. Transport • Men are predominant users of private transport (e.g. cars) • Women more reliant on public transport • Women and men have different patterns of transport use

  11. Gender analysis of the budget

  12. Gender Analysis of Expenditure Project • Pilot project to run for 6 months from Spring 2003 • Joint HM Treasury, Women & Equality Unit leadership of project with WBG involvement

  13. How did we do it? • Pilot involving 2 government department’s: • Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) • Department for Trade and Industry (DTI) • A brief high-level gender-disaggregated expenditure analysis for each department • A detailed gender disaggregated expenditure analysis for up to 2 specific programmes

  14. Why did HM Treasury do it? • Economic efficiency • Service delivery • Improved policy-making • Customer focus • Gender mainstreaming

  15. Lessons • Time • Commitment • Data • Joint working with high level support • Targets

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