Women’s Self-Employment as a Developmental Strategy: The Dual Constraints of Care Work and Aggregate Demand

Ramaa Vasudevan, Srinivas Raghavendra

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The promotion of self-employment through financial inclusion initiatives has been adopted as a means of harnessing the entrepreneurial and productive capacities of women within the neoliberal developmental policy framework. This study presents a simple analytical model in the Post-Keynesian tradition to investigate the linkages between self-employment, aggregate demand, and unpaid care work by developing a two-sector model. It shows that a developmental strategy based on fostering women’s self-employment is constrained, on the one hand, by the macroeconomic conditions driving aggregate demand and, on the other, by the trade-off between the time allocation between unpaid care and paid work that the gendered division of care work responsibilities imposes on the self-employed woman worker. The promotion of self-employment cannot serve as a viable development strategy without policies that directly boost aggregate demand and at the same time relieve the burden of care responsibilities on women through public investment and social provision of care. HIGHLIGHTS Self-employment is too often uncritically prescribed as a vehicle for improving women’s livelihoods. Increased self-employment creates competing claims on women’s time between paid work and unpaid care. Women’s self-employment perpetuates gendered asymmetries of care responsibilities within the household. Macroeconomic demand conditions constrain the potential for women’s self-employment to increase livelihoods and support development. Financial inclusion policies alone have limited scope in sustaining women’s self-employment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)56-83
Number of pages28
JournalFeminist Economics
Volume28
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Financial inclusion
  • Post-Keynesian macroeconomics
  • care work
  • development policy
  • women’s self-employment

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