Does social capital build women's assets? The long-term impacts of group-based and individual dissemination of agricultural technology in Bangladesh
Abstract
This paper investigates the long-term impact of agricultural technologies, disseminated using different implementation modalities on men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 asset accumulation in rural Bangladesh. Panel data spanning a 10-year period are used to examine the effects of the adoption of new vegetable varieties and polyculture fish pond management technologies on household resource allocation, incomes, and nutrition. A difference-in-differences model combined with nearest-neighbour matching is used to compare changes in husbands and wives鈥� assets within the same household. The results show women鈥檚 assets increase more relative to men鈥檚 when technologies are disseminated through women鈥檚 groups, suggesting that implementation modalities are important in determining the gendered impact of new technologies. These findings are robust to controls for unobserved household-level characteristics. These results suggest that social capital, as embodied through women鈥檚 groups, not only serves as a substitute for physical assets in the short run, but helps to build up women鈥檚 asset portfolios in the long run.
Citation
Quisumbing, A.; Kumar, N. Does social capital build women鈥檚 assets? The long-term impacts of group-based and individual dissemination of agricultural technology in Bangladesh. Journal of Development Effectiveness (2011) 3 (2) 220-242. [DOI: 10.1080/19439342.2011.570450]