The Impact of Mobile Phones on the Status of Women in India
Abstract/Contents
- Abstract
- Mobile phones have grown at an extraordinary rate throughout the developing world in recent years. They are potentially an invaluable economic asset to the poor and an important tool for strengthening social ties. Mobile phones may also help women overcome physical boundaries, especially in places where they are separated from their support networks and bound within their husband’s social sphere. This paper examines the impact of mobile phones on the status of women in India. Using nation-wide cross-sectional data at the individual level, I build on Jensen and Oster’s model for measuring women’s status. I use domestic violence, decision-making autonomy, child preferences and economic independence as proxies for bargaining power and status of women in their household and society. I find that mobile phones significantly decrease both men and women’s tolerance for domestic violence, increase women’s autonomy in mobility and economic independence, but do not find significant effects on child preferences and other measures of autonomy. Where the effects are significant, they are also large and in some cases equivalent to more than five extra years of education. These results suggest that the Government of India and those of other countries should consider mobile phones as a policy instrument for empowering women.
Description
Type of resource | text |
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Date created | May 2009 |
Creators/Contributors
Author | Lee, Dayoung | |
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Primary advisor | Jayachandran, Seema | |
Degree granting institution | Stanford University, Department of Economics |
Subjects
Subject | Stanford Department of Economics |
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Subject | mobile phones |
Subject | gender inequality |
Subject | domestic violence |
Subject | autonomy |
Subject | linear probability |
Subject | probit |
Subject | ordered probit |
Genre | Thesis |
Bibliographic information
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Preferred citation
- Preferred Citation
- Lee, Dayoung. (2009). The Impact of Mobile Phones on the Status of Women in India. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at: https://purl.stanford.edu/fh332jr5468
Collection
Stanford University, Department of Economics, Honors Theses
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