Abstract

Prior studies have assessed economic/instrumental dimensions of women's empowerment relative to its agency dimensions. This study assessed ever-married women's participation in the labor market as a form of agency for empowerment and household decision-making in Nigeria. The study utilizes secondary data from three national surveys of Nigeria's 2003, 2008, and 2013 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) to assess the differences and relationship between indices and the status of women's labor market participation and their empowerment or household decision-making over an 11-year period. Explanatory variables adopted were age group, religion, employment status, educational level, household wealth index, and region. Binomial logistic regression was used to predict the proxy variables of women's empowerment from the explanatory variables. Findings showed that women's access to paid employment, educational status, and the household wealth index improved their participation in household decision-making. However, the single factor that consistently increased the likelihood of an ever-married woman to be involved in all forms of household decision-making from 2008 to 2013 was household wealth. Also, religion affected the ability of ever-married women to participate in household decision-making. The ability of Muslim women to participate in all forms of decision-making decreased from 2008 to 2013. The study concluded that the factors that enhance household wealth will enhance married women's ability to be involved in household decision-making. Education of women is, however, a significant contribution to enhancing the balance of inequity between men and women in household decision-making. The attenuating effect of Islam on this prospect needs further investigation and interventions for married women living in Northern Nigeria.

Highlights

  • Empowerment enables women to realize their potential and participate fully in every aspect of life (Heyzer, 2005; Mejiuni, 2013)

  • There was a decrease in the proportion of ever- married women who were not employed who had these characteristics from 2003 through 2008 to 2013: those 35 years and older; those with primary and secondary level of education; those from the middle, richer, and richest household wealth quantiles; Christians; male head households; urban residents; and those residing in Northcentral, Northwest, Southeast and SouthSouth Nigeria

  • The proportion of women who did not engage in any of the decision-making process increased from 55.0% in 2003 to 57.3% in 2008 and 60.0% in 2013 in North-West Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

Empowerment enables women to realize their potential and participate fully in every aspect of life (Heyzer, 2005; Mejiuni, 2013) It improves their capacity for household decisionmaking with implications for their personal welfare and that of their children (Ruel et al, 2013). Institutions like the World Bank, United Nations agencies and local non-governmental organizations have implemented multiple programs aimed at improving the socioeconomic status of women. These programs create educational opportunities and access to micro-credit, among others (Malhotra and Mather, 1997; Kabeer, 2003; Duflo, 2012), with the aim of building financial independence capacity of women as a means for empowerment

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