Abstract

Gender budgeting calls for including a gender perspective at all levels of governmental budgetary processes. While the literature on gender budgeting is interdisciplinary and covers a wide geographical range, it remains fragmented. This study uses a literature review to examine the current discourse on gender budgeting and to elicit avenues for future research. Our review shows that studies focus either on emerging economies, such as India or South Africa, or on countries in Europe. Drawing on an analytical framework, we find that most studies scrutinize the ex ante stages of gender budgeting, whereas less is known about the concurrent and ex post stages. Moreover, because little is known about the outcome and impact of gender budgeting, governments do not know what instruments function best in different settings. Given their ex ante focus, most studies on gender budgeting often either remain descriptive or analyse secondary data. Despite scholars from different disciplines contributing to the field of gender budgeting, several ‘blank spots’ remain, particularly in public sector accounting. Points for practitioners While current gender budgeting projects tend to focus on the ex ante stage of gender budgeting, future practitioner attention needs to focus on the equally important concurrent and ex post stages, which have received less attention thus far. An increasing number of governments worldwide are implementing gender budgeting projects. Governments need to evaluate the outcome and impact of these projects in a timely fashion, aiming at reducing structural inequalities related to gender. Gender budgeting is willingly adopted in times of prosperity and stability or when the scope of projects appears manageable. To avoid negative impacts on their achievements, policy makers need to put gender budgeting on the political agenda and institutionalize it in times of instability and crisis.

Highlights

  • The idea of accounting for gender in public finance in general and in the budgeting process in particular is not new, and many governments worldwide are implementing gender budgeting

  • Responding to calls in the public sector accounting literature for a focus on gender and accounting (Khalifa and Scarparo, 2020; Steccolini, 2019), this review focuses on the subdiscourse at the interface of gender equality and public financial management

  • To assess the literature on gender budgeting, we develop a research framework that includes four different dimensions: the antecedents of gender budgeting, the approach of introducing gender budgeting across different stages of the budgeting process, the implementation context and the outcome and impact associated with gender budgeting

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Summary

Introduction

The idea of accounting for gender in public finance in general and in the budgeting process in particular is not new, and many governments worldwide are implementing gender budgeting (see, e.g. the recent empirical accounts in edited volumes and special issues: Ng, 2016; O’Hagan, 2015, 2018). To assess the literature on gender budgeting, we develop a research framework that includes four different dimensions: the antecedents of gender budgeting, the approach of introducing gender budgeting across different stages of the budgeting process, the implementation context and the outcome and impact associated with gender budgeting This study examines the literature that focuses on such contextual factors, including gender gaps in a certain region or country, the prevailing economic, political and socio-cultural context, and implementation barriers.

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