Drawing upon household surveys in Ecuador, Ghana and Karnataka, India, we analyse the relationship between assets and shocks, distinguishing between asset loss as the shock, and the use of assets as a coping strategy. A greater proportion of households experienced a direct loss of assets due to shocks than as a coping response. In Karnataka, but not in Ghana or Ecuador, women’s assets are more likely to be sold than men’s. Asset ownership and the decision to sell or pawn assets are fairly strongly related but do not completely overlap. Husbands and wives often differ in both the perception of shocks and the response to them
This paper examines how investors in an emerging market react to a domestic financial crisis. We con...
This paper analyzes the intra‐household allocation of risk‐coping mechanisms by testing whether the ...
Wealth indicators have not been widely examined in studies of women’s economic well-being and little...
Drawing upon household surveys in Ecuador, Ghana and Karnataka, India, we analyse the relationship b...
Households in developing countries use a variety of mechanisms to cope with shocks, such as selling ...
This background paper attempts to expand our understanding of the gender-differentiated impact of sh...
Assets are an important means of coping with adverse events in developing countries but the role of ...
Husbands and wives accumulate and own assets both individually and jointly, and they use these asset...
An extensive literature shows how property inheritance is biased against women in many developing co...
Households in developing countries use a variety of mechanisms to cope with shocks, such as drawing ...
This paper examines asset dynamics for husband-owned, wife-owned, and jointly owned assets, using un...
PRIFPRI3; ISI; CRP2; E Building Resilience; G Cross-cutting gender theme; COPPIM; PHNDCGIAR Research...
Assets are an important means of coping with adverse events in developing countries but the role of ...
This paper is motivated by the observation that the type and the combination of assets are associate...
The paper analytically and empirically examines the issue of gender inequality in household wealth i...
This paper examines how investors in an emerging market react to a domestic financial crisis. We con...
This paper analyzes the intra‐household allocation of risk‐coping mechanisms by testing whether the ...
Wealth indicators have not been widely examined in studies of women’s economic well-being and little...
Drawing upon household surveys in Ecuador, Ghana and Karnataka, India, we analyse the relationship b...
Households in developing countries use a variety of mechanisms to cope with shocks, such as selling ...
This background paper attempts to expand our understanding of the gender-differentiated impact of sh...
Assets are an important means of coping with adverse events in developing countries but the role of ...
Husbands and wives accumulate and own assets both individually and jointly, and they use these asset...
An extensive literature shows how property inheritance is biased against women in many developing co...
Households in developing countries use a variety of mechanisms to cope with shocks, such as drawing ...
This paper examines asset dynamics for husband-owned, wife-owned, and jointly owned assets, using un...
PRIFPRI3; ISI; CRP2; E Building Resilience; G Cross-cutting gender theme; COPPIM; PHNDCGIAR Research...
Assets are an important means of coping with adverse events in developing countries but the role of ...
This paper is motivated by the observation that the type and the combination of assets are associate...
The paper analytically and empirically examines the issue of gender inequality in household wealth i...
This paper examines how investors in an emerging market react to a domestic financial crisis. We con...
This paper analyzes the intra‐household allocation of risk‐coping mechanisms by testing whether the ...
Wealth indicators have not been widely examined in studies of women’s economic well-being and little...