Women, Business and the Law 2024 is the 10th annual study measuring the enabling conditions affecting women's economic opportunities in 190 economies. This edition introduces two new indicators-Safety and Childcare - and examines the gap between laws (de jure) and their practical implementation (de facto). The study presents three indexes: legal frameworks, supportive frameworks (policies, institutions, services, data, budget, and access to justice), and expert opinions on women's rights in practice. The 10 indicators- Safety, Mobility, Workplace, Pay, Marriage, Parenthood, Childcare, Entrepreneurship, Assets, and Pension - are structured around different stages of a woman's working life. Findings from this research can inform policy discussions to ensure women's full and equal participation in the economy, highlighting the critical relationship between legal gender equality and women's employment and entrepreneurship. Data in Women, Business and the Law 2024 are current as of October 1, 2023.
Authors
- DOI
- https://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-2063-2
- Disclosure Date
- 2024/11/06
- Disclosure Status
- Disclosed
- Doc Name
- Women, Business and the Law 2024
- ISBN
- 978-1-4648-2063-2; 978-1-4648-2064-9
- Pages
- 182
- Product Line
- Advisory Services & Analytics
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rel Proj ID
- 1W-Women, Business And The Law Reports Fy 19-24 -- P167792
- Series Name
- Women; Business; and the Law;
- TF No/Name
- TF0B6860-JAC_Global_Childcare Policy Indicators,TF0B9727-WBL Childcare Indicators,TF0B9813-KCP IV - Women, Business and the Law in Practice: Completing a Framewor,TF0C0184-Women, Business, and the Law,TF0C4169-Women, Business, and the Law: New research, analysis and dissemination,TF0C4794-Legal and Policy Framework Indicators for Sexual and Reproductive Healt
- Unit Owning
- Women, Business & the Law- IFC (DECWL)
- Version Type
- Final
- Volume No
- 1
Table of Contents
- Front Cover 1
- Contents 5
- Foreword 11
- Acknowledgments 13
- Main Messages 15
- Executive Summary 19
- Abbreviations 41
- Chapter 1 Tracking Progress on Women’s Legal Rights 43
- Annex 1A Summaries of Reforms 57
- Chapter 2 Introducing Women, Business and the Law 2.0: Toward Better Measurement of Laws, Policies, and Practices 61
- Annex 2A Women, Business and the Law 2.0 questions 97
- Chapter 3 Women, Business and the Law 2.0: Trends Emerging from Data Analysis of New Measurements 107
- Annex 3A Women, Business and the Law 1.0 and 2.0 scores 137
- Appendix A Data Notes 145
- Boxes 20
- Box ES.1 From Women, Business and the Law 1.0 to Women, Business and the Law 2.0 20
- Box 1.1 About Women, Business and the Law 44
- Box 1.2 How Women, Business and the Law informs the World Bank’s 2024–30 Gender Strategy: Accelerate Gender Equality to End Poverty on a Livable Planet 45
- Box 2.1: Expert opinions questions: An example 93
- Box A.1: Assumptions used to ensure comparability 146
- Figures 21
- Figure ES.1: Women, Business and the Law 2.0 introduces new measurements to track global progress toward gender equality 21
- Figure ES.2: Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa show the largest gaps in WBL 2.0 legal frameworks scores, exceeding 60 points 23
- Figure ES.3: Safety, Entrepreneurship, and Childcare indicators have the largest legal gaps 24
- Figure ES.4: The lowest scores for supportive frameworks are in Sub-Saharan Africa, followed by the Middle East and North Africa 24
- Figure ES.5: The largest ranges in expert opinions scores are within the East Asia and Pacific and South Asia regions 25
- Figure ES.6: Economies with high scores on the WBL 1.0 legal index continue to have high scores on the WBL 2.0 legal index 27
- Figure ES.7: More gender-equal laws are associated with better supportive frameworks 28
- Figure ES.8: More gender-equal laws are associated with the perception of more rights for women in practice 30
- Figure ES.9: Supportive frameworks lag behind legal frameworks and expert opinions scores across regions and income groups 31
- Figure ES.10: In 2022–23, 18 economies enacted reforms across all Women, Business and the Law 1.0 indicators 32
- Figure B1.1.1 The eight Women, Business and the Law 1.0 indicators 44
- Figure 1.1 The largest legal gaps are in the Middle East and North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa 48
- Figure 1.2 Gaps in scores of more than 60 points are found across all income groups 49
- Figure 1.3 Most reforms were undertaken in Sub-Saharan Africa and low-income economies 50
- Figure 1.4 In 2022–23, 18 economies enacted reforms across all Women, Business and the Law 1.0 indicators 53
- Figure 2.1 Women, Business and the Law 2.0 introduces new measurements to track global progress toward Gender equality 62
- Figure 2.2: Safety legal frameworks questions examine laws on child marriage, sexual harassment, domestic violence, and femicide 67
- Figure 2.3: Childcare legal frameworks questions examine laws governing the provision of center-based childcare services 70
- Figure 2.4: Mobility legal frameworks questions examine laws affecting women’s agency and freedom of movement 71
- Figure 2.5: Workplace legal frameworks questions examine laws affecting women’s decisions to work 72
- Figure 2.6: Pay legal frameworks questions examine laws affecting the gender wage gap 73
- Figure 2.7: Marriage legal frameworks questions examine constraints in marriage and divorce 74
- Figure 2.8: Parenthood legal frameworks questions examine paid leave policies and protections for pregnant workers 75
- Figure 2.9: Entrepreneurship legal frameworks questions examine legal constraints on women’s abilities to start and run a business 76
- Figure 2.10: Assets legal frameworks questions examine gender differences in property and inheritance laws 78
- Figure 2.11: Pension legal frameworks questions examine laws affecting the size of a woman’s pension 79
- Figure 2.12: Safety supportive frameworks questions examine mechanisms implementing laws on child marriage, sexual harassment, domestic violence, and femicide 82
- Figure 2.13: Mobility supportive frameworks questions examine bureaucratic barriers to women’s agency and freedom of movement 83
- Figure 2.14: Workplace supportive frameworks questions examine measures implementing laws affecting women’s decisions to work 84
- Figure 2.15: Pay supportive frameworks questions examine measures implementing laws affecting women’s pay 85
- Figure 2.16: Marriage supportive frameworks questions examine courts and procedures in family law 86
- Figure 2.17: Parenthood supportive frameworks questions examine measures implementing laws affecting women’s work upon the birth of a child 87
- Figure 2.18: Childcare supportive frameworks questions examine mechanisms implementing childcare laws 88
- Figure 2.19: Entrepreneurship supportive frameworks questions examine programs and data supporting female entrepreneurs 89
- Figure 2.20: Assets supportive frameworks questions examine mechanisms and data to implement women’s property and inheritance rights 90
- Figure 2.21: Pension supportive frameworks questions examine policies aimed at reducing the gender pension gap 91
- Figure 2.22: Pathway to the new Women, Business and the Law 2.0 index 96
- Figure 3.1: The new Women, Business and the Law 2.0 approach goes beyond laws 108
- Figure 3.2: Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa have the largest gaps in WBL 2.0 legal frameworks scores, exceeding 60 points 110
- Figure 3.3: Gaps in WBL 2.0 legal frameworks scores exceed 60 points across all income groups 111
- Figure 3.4: Safety, Entrepreneurship, and Childcare indicators have the largest legal gaps 112
- Figure 3.5: Economies with high scores on the WBL 1.0 legal index continue to have high scores on the WBL 2.0 legal index 114
- Figure 3.6: Scores across regions and income groups are lower on the WBL 2.0 legal index than on the WBL 1.0 legal index 115
- Figure 3.7: The lowest scores for supportive frameworks are in Sub-Saharan Africa, followed by the Middle East and North Africa 118
- Figure 3.8: The adoption of supportive frameworks varies most in high-income economies 118
- Figure 3.9: Globally, the most supportive frameworks are in place for Mobility and the fewest for Workplace 119
- Figure 3.10: All regions and income groups lack the supportive frameworks needed to protect women’s rights 121
- Figure 3.11: For nearly all indicators, there is a substantial gap between the legal and supportive frameworks scores 122
- Figure 3.12: The largest ranges in expert opinions scores are within the East Asia and Pacific and South Asia regions 124
- Figure 3.13: There is a 31-point difference in average expert opinions scores on women’s rights in practice between low- and high-income groups 125
- Figure 3.14: The Pension indicator receives the highest score and Safety the lowest score from the experts 126
- Figure 3.15: Experts in the Middle East and North Africa, East Asia and Pacific, and high-income economies perceive more women’s rights in practice than the legal frameworks suggest 127
- Figure 3.16: Experts’ assessment of women’s rights in practice are different than the legal frameworks suggest 128
- Figure 3.17: More gender-equal laws are associated with better supportive frameworks 130
- Figure 3.18: More gender-equal laws are associated with the perception of more rights for women in practice 133
- Figure 3.19: Supportive frameworks lag behind legal frameworks and expert opinions scores across regions and income groups 136
- Maps 109
- Map 3.1: Women have less than two-thirds of the legal rights of men under the new index 109
- Map 3.2: Globally, two-fifths of supportive frameworks are in place to implement gender-equal laws 117
- Map 3.3: Experts’ perceptions: Two-thirds of women enjoy rights equal to those of men 124
- Tables 22
- Table ES.1 Introducing the 10 indicators of Women, Business and the Law 2.0: Toward better measurement of laws, policies, and practices 22
- Table ES.A.1 Women, Business and the Law 2.0 questions 33
- Table ES.B.1 Women, Business and the Law 1.0 and 2.0 scores 35
- Table 1.1 Women, Business and the Law 2024 score (WBL 1.0) 47
- Table 1.2 Five economies advanced the most toward gender equality since October 2022 50
- Table 1.3 In 2022–23, economies implemented the highest number of reforms to improve gender equality in the Parenthood indicator 54
- Table 2.1 Introducing the 10 indicators of Women, Business and the Law 2.0: Toward better measurement of laws, policies, and practices 63
- Table 2.2 Fifty-nine economies prohibit women from performing certain tasks in industrial jobs 73
- Table 2.3 Women, Business and the Law 2.0 measures various categories of supportive frameworks 80
- Table 2.4 Expert opinions questions 94
- Table 2A.1 Women, Business and the Law 2.0 questions 97
- Table 3A.1: Women, Business and the Law 1.0 and 2.0 scores 137
- Table A.1: Methodological strengths and limitations of the Women, Business and the Law indexes 148
- Table A.2: Women, Business and the Law 1.0 indicators and questions 150
- Table A.3: Women, Business and the Law 2.0 legal frameworks indicators and questions 158
- Table A.4: Women, Business and the Law 2.0 supportive frameworks indicators and questions 169
- Table A.5: Women, Business and the Law 2.0 expert opinions indicators and questions 177