1 / 14

Hearing on “Gender Budgeting: State of Play and Way Forward”

Hearing on “Gender Budgeting: State of Play and Way Forward”. Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality (FEMM) European Parliament June 20, 2018 Dr. Elisabeth Klatzer elisabeth.klatzer@gmx.net. Introduction.

Download Presentation

Hearing on “Gender Budgeting: State of Play and Way Forward”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hearing on “Gender Budgeting: State of Play and Way Forward” Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality (FEMM)European Parliament June 20, 2018 Dr. Elisabeth Klatzer elisabeth.klatzer@gmx.net

  2. Introduction • First European Parliament resolution on gender budgeting - building public budgets from a gender perspective (2003) • Since then major progress throughout the world and in European countries • Is the EU keeping pace with international developments?

  3. Gender Budgeting as international Standard in Public Finance Management work • OECD recognizedGender budgeting is a key tool for implementing gender equality • International Monetary Fund (IMF) engageswith GB • 2016 international review: Gender Budgeting: Fiscal Context and Current Outcomes • Properly designed gender budgeting improves government budgeting systems

  4. Gender Responsive Public Finance Management Institutions and Practices “Gender-responsive budgeting (GRB) is good budgeting.” (Janet Stotsky, International Monetary Fund)

  5. Clear Legal Obligations • Legal basis obliging EU institutions and Member States to gender equality and preventing discrimination, including in budgetary policies: • Article 2 and 3, TEU • Article 8 and 11, TFEU • Art. 23 Charter of Fundamental Rights • CEDAW, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women • Beijing Platform of Action etc. • Political Commitments to Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at Member States level as well as by the European Commission

  6. Obligations: Sustainable Development Goals • Specific indicator on Gender Budgeting included in the list of SDG indicators • Indicator 5c.1: Proportion of countries with systems to track and make public allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment • Criteria for 5c.1. indicator: • Criterion 1: Address well-identified gender equality goals; have adequate resources allocated and executed within the budget • Criterion 2: Extent to which Public Financial Management system promotes gender-related or gender-responsive goals • Criterion 3: Criterion 3. Allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment made public

  7. Gender Budgeting – living up to the standards • Gender budgetingis an applicationof Gender Mainstreaming in thebudgetaryprocess. • It means a gender based assessment of budgets incorporating a gender perspective at all levels of the budgetary process and restructuring revenues and expenditures in order to promote gender equality. (Council of Europe)

  8. Gender Budgeting – livinguptothestandards (2) dfs fg Integrating gender perspectives at all stages of the budget and planning processes Gender budget analyses Involving inside actors and external stakeholders dfsa Changes based on gender analyses

  9. A range of standard GB tools 9 Source: OECD 2016, own adaptations

  10. Wide and extensive practiceof Gender Budgeting throughout Europe • See: Gender Budgeting in Europe. Developments and Challenges Angela O’Hagan & Elisabeth Klatzer (2018), editors • Wealth of contributions from the European Gender Budgeting Network (EGBN) • Extensive experience in many public administrations • EU lagging far behind

  11. EU islaggingbehind & fallingfurther back • In last MFF Gender Budgeting was not systematically applied to EU budget • 2021-2027 Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) proposalbythe European Commissionevenfurtherstepsbackwards: • Gender Equality not visible as a priority • No “Gender Mainstreaming in the Budget Process” (see Council of Europe standard definition of GB) • Gender Equality even further disappearing • see ESIF proposals • see Rights and Values Programme 2021-2027 • Increasing Funds to gender blind areas and areas fundamentally detrimental to promoting peace and equality • see tremendous increases of EU funds for militarization and weapon’s industry • see e.g. stronger links of funding to structural reforms, but not to gender equality progress (weagreedthatfollowingspeakers will providemoredetails on this …)

  12. EU islaggingbehind. Howto catch up? • Implement legal obligations through out budget processes • Full implementation of Gender Budgeting • in MFF • in annual budget process • in all Funds • Not as an option, but as a key requirement

  13. Recommendations • FEMM Committee to take a leading role in making sure the European Parliament does not approve any budget which doesn‘t meet internationally recogized standards of good governance and Public Finance Management & Gender Budgeting • Set up an ad hoc advisory group of experts on Gender Budgeting to support work in MFF negotiations • Adopt an own initiative report on Gender Budgeting in the new MFF • Building on existing reports and expertise

  14. Key challenge and target • European Parliament to take a leading role • in making sure EU approves MFF & regulatory package ONLY, IF • it meets EU treaty obligations towards gender equality and • international standards and obligations of good governance in Public Finance Management & Gender Budgeting

More Related