This study complements existing literature by investigating how the advancement in information and communication technology affects the formal economic participation of women. The focus is on 48 African countries for the period 1990-2014. The empirical evidence is based on Ordinary Least Squares, Fixed Effects and the Generalized Method of Moments regressions. The results show that improving communication technology increases female economic participation with the following consistent order of increasing magnitude: mobile phone penetration; internet penetration, and fixed broadband subscriptions. The findings are robust to the control for heterogeneities across countries. Policy implications are discussed
The aim of the study is to analyze the ways women are empowered through information and communicatio...
Abstract: In 2015, the global community, via the United Nations, adopted the Sustainable Development...
This study examines if enhancing ICT reduces inequality in 48 countries in Africa for the period 200...
This study complements existing literature by investigating how the advancement in information and c...
This study investigates how technological advancement improves gender identity by means of female ec...
This study investigates how ICT affects gender economic inclusion via gender parity education channe...
The study investigates the relevance of information and communication technology (ICT) in modulating...
This study investigates how enhancing information and communication technology (ICT) affects female ...
The study assesses how ICT modulates the effect of inequality on female economic participation in a ...
The study assesses how ICT modulates the effect of inequality on female economic participation in a ...
This policy paper draws on a rich data set arising from the household and individual access and usag...
The paper commences with a review of the concept of Information Communication technology (ICT) and p...
This study assesses if increasing information and communication technology (ICT) enhances inclusive ...
Significant shreds of evidence from literature revealed that women constitute half of the world’s hu...
This study assesses the relationship between globalisation and the economic participation of women (...
The aim of the study is to analyze the ways women are empowered through information and communicatio...
Abstract: In 2015, the global community, via the United Nations, adopted the Sustainable Development...
This study examines if enhancing ICT reduces inequality in 48 countries in Africa for the period 200...
This study complements existing literature by investigating how the advancement in information and c...
This study investigates how technological advancement improves gender identity by means of female ec...
This study investigates how ICT affects gender economic inclusion via gender parity education channe...
The study investigates the relevance of information and communication technology (ICT) in modulating...
This study investigates how enhancing information and communication technology (ICT) affects female ...
The study assesses how ICT modulates the effect of inequality on female economic participation in a ...
The study assesses how ICT modulates the effect of inequality on female economic participation in a ...
This policy paper draws on a rich data set arising from the household and individual access and usag...
The paper commences with a review of the concept of Information Communication technology (ICT) and p...
This study assesses if increasing information and communication technology (ICT) enhances inclusive ...
Significant shreds of evidence from literature revealed that women constitute half of the world’s hu...
This study assesses the relationship between globalisation and the economic participation of women (...
The aim of the study is to analyze the ways women are empowered through information and communicatio...
Abstract: In 2015, the global community, via the United Nations, adopted the Sustainable Development...
This study examines if enhancing ICT reduces inequality in 48 countries in Africa for the period 200...