The impact of female leadership on public spending and service access: causal evidence from Indonesia

This seminar investigates the consequences of electing a female leader for fiscal and service outcomes. A dataset of districts in Indonesia with close election results between male and female mayoral candidates from 2005 to 2017 is used. The study employs a randomisation-based inference in regression discontinuity design to deal with non-random assignment of female leadership. The results show that per capita expenditure on health, social protection, and infrastructure are higher for districts that are governed by female leaders. Also, female leadership improves citizen access to both assisted birth by health professionals and safe water. Finally, the findings show that female-led districts have more prudent budget management while neither fewer nor more corruption cases.

Ruth Nikijuluw is a final year PhD student in Economics at Australian National University. Her research interests are local public finance, gender, political economy and natural resource management. 

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Contact: Ryan Edwards | seminars.economics@anu.edu.au

 

 

Date & time

Fri 25 Sep 2020, 11am–12pm

Location

Zoom

Speakers

Crawford School of Public Policy; Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis

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Updated:  22 September 2020/Responsible Officer:  Convenor, Gender Institute/Page Contact:  Gender Institute