Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions

Across a wide variety of regions and contexts, surveys have found high rates of disagreement within couples on matters of household decision making. Using a unique data set from a spousal survey of 421 agricultural households in the Philippines, th...

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Main Authors: Liaqat, Sundas, Donald, Aletheia, Jarvis, Forest, Perova, Elizaveta, Johnson, Hillary C.
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/169581639491956591/Lost-in-Interpretation-Why-Spouses-Disagree-on-Who-Makes-Decisions
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36741
id okr-10986-36741
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-367412021-12-17T05:10:54Z Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions Liaqat, Sundas Donald, Aletheia Jarvis, Forest Perova, Elizaveta Johnson, Hillary C. DECISION MAKING GENDER BARGAINING POWER DIVISION OF LABOR ASSET OWNERSHIP ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION GENDER INNOVATION LAB INTRAHOUSEHOLD DECISION MAKING INTRAHOUSEHOLD BARGAINING AFRICA GENDER POLICY Across a wide variety of regions and contexts, surveys have found high rates of disagreement within couples on matters of household decision making. Using a unique data set from a spousal survey of 421 agricultural households in the Philippines, this paper finds that 50.2 percent of couples disagree about who makes any given decision in the household. The paper systematically explores the empirical relevance of theoretical explanations from the existing literature for this spousal disagreement. Spouses are no more likely to agree on specific decisions compared with general decision making, are more likely to agree on the decision-making process, and are less likely to agree on decision making for activities in which both take part. Moreover, women are more likely to report that their husbands were involved in decision making when speaking with a female enumerator. The findings suggest that intrahousehold disagreement is not driven by differing interpretations of which decisions count as “major,” or by asymmetric information. Although the paper finds evidence of enumerator effects, their magnitude is small and cannot explain the observed rates of spousal disagreement over decision making. Rather, spousal disagreement appears to stem primarily from systematic gender differences in interpreting what it means to be a decision maker. The paper discusses the implications of the findings for the measurement of intrahousehold decision making in household surveys. 2021-12-16T16:59:28Z 2021-12-16T16:59:28Z 2021-12 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/169581639491956591/Lost-in-Interpretation-Why-Spouses-Disagree-on-Who-Makes-Decisions http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36741 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9883 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Philippines
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic DECISION MAKING
GENDER
BARGAINING POWER
DIVISION OF LABOR
ASSET OWNERSHIP
ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
INTRAHOUSEHOLD DECISION MAKING
INTRAHOUSEHOLD BARGAINING
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
spellingShingle DECISION MAKING
GENDER
BARGAINING POWER
DIVISION OF LABOR
ASSET OWNERSHIP
ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
INTRAHOUSEHOLD DECISION MAKING
INTRAHOUSEHOLD BARGAINING
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
Liaqat, Sundas
Donald, Aletheia
Jarvis, Forest
Perova, Elizaveta
Johnson, Hillary C.
Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Philippines
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9883
description Across a wide variety of regions and contexts, surveys have found high rates of disagreement within couples on matters of household decision making. Using a unique data set from a spousal survey of 421 agricultural households in the Philippines, this paper finds that 50.2 percent of couples disagree about who makes any given decision in the household. The paper systematically explores the empirical relevance of theoretical explanations from the existing literature for this spousal disagreement. Spouses are no more likely to agree on specific decisions compared with general decision making, are more likely to agree on the decision-making process, and are less likely to agree on decision making for activities in which both take part. Moreover, women are more likely to report that their husbands were involved in decision making when speaking with a female enumerator. The findings suggest that intrahousehold disagreement is not driven by differing interpretations of which decisions count as “major,” or by asymmetric information. Although the paper finds evidence of enumerator effects, their magnitude is small and cannot explain the observed rates of spousal disagreement over decision making. Rather, spousal disagreement appears to stem primarily from systematic gender differences in interpreting what it means to be a decision maker. The paper discusses the implications of the findings for the measurement of intrahousehold decision making in household surveys.
format Working Paper
author Liaqat, Sundas
Donald, Aletheia
Jarvis, Forest
Perova, Elizaveta
Johnson, Hillary C.
author_facet Liaqat, Sundas
Donald, Aletheia
Jarvis, Forest
Perova, Elizaveta
Johnson, Hillary C.
author_sort Liaqat, Sundas
title Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
title_short Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
title_full Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
title_fullStr Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
title_full_unstemmed Lost in Interpretation : Why Spouses Disagree on Who Makes Decisions
title_sort lost in interpretation : why spouses disagree on who makes decisions
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/169581639491956591/Lost-in-Interpretation-Why-Spouses-Disagree-on-Who-Makes-Decisions
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36741
_version_ 1764485810041651200