Does paid work provide a pathway to women's empowerment? Empirical findings from Bangladesh
Abstract
The debate about the relationship between paid work and women’s position
within the family and society is a long standing one. Some argue that women’s
integration into the market is the key to their empowerment while others offer
more sceptical, often pessimistic, accounts of this relationship. These
contradictory viewpoints reflect a variety of factors: variations in how
empowerment itself is understood, variations in the cultural meanings and social
acceptability of paid work for women across different contexts and the nature of
the available work opportunities within particular contexts. This paper uses a
combination of survey data and qualitative interviews to explore the impact of
paid work on various indicators of women’s empowerment ranging from shifts in
intra‐household decision‐making processes to women’s participation in public
life. It finds that forms of work that offer regular and relatively independent
incomes hold out the greater transformative potential. In addition, it highlights a
range of other factors that also appear to contribute to women’s voice and
agency in the context of Bangladesh.