Gender Inequality Index


The Gender Inequality Index is an index for measurement of gender disparity that was introduced in the 2010 Human Development Report 20th anniversary edition by the United Nations Development Programme. According to the UNDP, this index is a composite measure to quantify the loss of achievement within a country due to gender inequality. It uses three dimensions to measure opportunity cost: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor market participation.
The new index was introduced as an experimental measure to remedy the shortcomings of the previous indicators, the Gender Development Index and the Gender Empowerment Measure, both of which were introduced in the 1995 Human Development Report.

Origins

As international recognition of the importance of eliminating gender inequality was growing, the Gender Development Index and the Gender Empowerment Measure were introduced in the 1995 Human Development Report. The GDI and GEM became the primary indices for measuring global gender inequality for the United Nations Human Development Reports. The GDI and GEM faced much criticism for their methodological and conceptual limitations.
Beneria and Permanyer have explained that the GDI and GEM are not measurements of gender inequality in and of themselves. The GDI is a composite index which measures development within a country then negatively corrects for gender inequality; and the GEM measures the access women have to attaining means of power in economics, politics, and making decisions. Both of which Beneria and Permanyer claim are inaccurate in clearly capturing gender inequality. According to the UNDP, the GDI was criticized for its inability to accurately measure gender inequality for its components being too closely related to the Human Development Index, a composite measure of human development used by the UNDP.
Thus, the differences between the HDI and GDI were small leading to the implication that gender disparities were irrelevant to human development. The UNDP also claims that both the GDI and GEM were criticized because income levels had a tendency to dominate the earned income component, which resulted in countries with low income levels not being able to get high scores, even in cases where their levels of gender inequality may have been low. The GEM indicators proved to be more relevant to developed countries than less-developed countries. With international growing concern for gender equality, the participants of the World Economic Forum in 2007, among others, recognized that the advancement of women was a significant issue that impacted the growth of nations.
As of 2006, the World Economic Forum has been using the Gender Gap Index in its Global Gender Gap Reports, which ranks countries according to their gender gaps, in an attempt to better capture gender disparities. Beneria and Permanyer criticize the GGI for only capturing inequality in certain aspects of women's lives therefore making it an incomplete measure of gender inequality.
Given the amount of criticism the GDI and GEM were facing, the UNDP felt that these indices did not fully capture the disparities women faced. In an attempt to reform the GDI and GEM, the UNDP introduced the Gender Inequality Index in the 2010 Human Development Report. The new index is a composite measure which, according to the UNDP, captures the loss of achievement due to gender inequality using three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor market participation. The GII does not include income levels as a component, which was one of the most controversial components of the GDI and GEM. It also does not allow for high achievements in one dimension to compensate for low achievement in another.

Dimensions

There are three critical dimensions to the GII: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor market participation. The dimensions are captured in one synthetic index, as to account for joint significance. According to the UNDP, none of the measures in the dimensions pertain to the country's development and therefore a less-developed country can perform well if gender inequality is low. The UNDP considers the dimensions complementary in that inequality in one dimension tends to affect inequality in another. Therefore, the GII captures association across dimensions, making the index association-sensitive, and ensuring that high achievement in one dimension does not compensate for low achievement in another dimension.

Reproductive health

Permanyer notes that the GII is a pioneering index, in that it is the first index to include reproductive health indicators as a measurement for gender inequality. The GII's dimension of reproductive health have two indicators: the Maternal Mortality Ratio, the data for which come UNICEF's State of the World's Children, and the adolescent fertility rate, the data for which is obtained through the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, respectively. With a low MMR, it is implied that pregnant women have access to adequate health needs, therefore the MMR is a good measure of women's access to health care. The UNDP expresses that women's health during pregnancy and childbearing is a clear sign of women's status in society.
A high AFR, which measures early childbearing, results in health risks for mothers and infants as well as a lack of higher education attainment. According to the UNDP data, reproductive health accounts for the largest loss due to gender inequality, among all regions.

Empowerment

The empowerment dimension is measured by two indicators: the share of parliamentary seats held by each sex, which is obtained from the International Parliamentary Union, and higher education attainment levels, which is obtained through United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and Barro-Lee data sets. The GII index of higher education evaluates women's attainment to secondary education and above. Access to higher education expands women's freedom by increasing their ability to question and increases their access to information which expands their public involvement.
There is much literature that finds women's access to education may reduce the AFR and child mortality rates within a country. Due to data limitations the parliament representation indicator is limited to national parliament and excludes local government or other community involvement. Although women's representation in parliament has been increasing women have been disadvantaged in representation of parliament with a global average of only 16%.

Labor market participation

The labor market dimension is measured by women's participation in the workforce. This dimension accounts for paid work, unpaid work, and actively looking for work. The data for this dimension is obtained through the International Labour Organization databases. Due to data limitations women's income and unpaid work are not represented in the labor market dimension of GII. In the absence of reliable earned income data across countries, the UNDP considers labor market participation a suitable substitute for economic aspects of gender inequality.

Calculations

The metrics of the GII are similar in calculations to the Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index, which was also introduced in the 2010 Human Development Report, and can be interpreted as a percentage loss of human development due to shortcomings in the included dimensions. The value of GII range between 0 and 1, with 0 being 0% inequality, indicating women fare equally in comparison to men and 1 being 100% inequality, indicating women fare poorly in comparison to men. There is a correlation between GII ranks and human development distribution, according to the UNDP countries that exhibit high gender inequality also show inequality in distribution of development, and vice versa.
The GII is an association-sensitive, responsive to distributional changes across dimension, composite index used to rank the loss of development through gender inequality within a country. The GII measures inequalities by addressing the shortcomings of other measures through aggregate strategy using multiple correspondence analysis in order to avoid aggregation problems. There are five steps to computing the gender inequality Index.
Step 1: Treating zeros and extreme values:
The maternal mortality rate is truncated systematically at minimum of 10 and maximum of 1,000. The maximum and minimum is based on the normative assumption that all countries with maternal mortality ratios above 1,000 do not differ in their ability to support for maternal health as well as the assumption that all countries below 10 do not differ in their abilities.
Countries with parliamentary representation reporting at 0 are counted as 0.1 because of the assumption that women have some level of political influence and that the geometric mean can not have a 0 value.
Step 2: Aggregating across dimensions within each gender group, using geometric means:
Aggregating across dimensions for each gender group by the geometric mean makes the GII association-sensitive. The maternal mortality rate and the adolescent fertility rate are only relevant for females the males are only aggregated with the other two dimensions.
Step 3: Aggregating across gender groups, using a harmonic mean:
To compute the equally distributed gender index the female and male indices are aggregated by the harmonic mean of the geometric means to capture the inequality between females and males and adjust for association between dimensions.
Step 4: Calculating the geometric mean of the arithmetic means for each indicator:
Obtain the reference standard by aggregating female and male indices with equal weight, and then aggregating indices across dimensions.
Reproductive health is not an average of female and male indices but half the distance from the norms established
Step 5: Calculating the Gender Inequality Index:
To compute the GII compare the equally distributed gender index from Step 3 to the reference standard from Step 4.

Changes in 2011 calculations

According to the UNDP there was a minor calculation change to the 2011 Gender Inequality Index from the 2010 index used. The maternal mortality ratio was calculated in the Gender Inequality Index at 10 even though the range of GII values should be between 0 and 1. To correct this the maternal mortality ratio is normalized by 10, which generally reduced the values of the GII. A trend for the GII has been calculated and can be found on the website.

Loss due to gender inequality

As there is no country with perfect gender equality, all countries suffer some loss of human development due to gender inequality. The difference in dimensions used in the GII and HDI means that the GII is not interpreted as a loss of HDI, but has its own rank and value separate from the HDI. The GII is interpreted as a percentage and indicates the percentage of potential human development lost due to gender inequality. The world average GII score in 2011 was 0.492, which indicates a 49.2% loss in potential human development due to gender inequality. Due to the limitations of data and data quality, the 2010 Human Development Report calculated GII rankings of 138 countries for the year 2008. The 2011 Human Development Report was able to calculate the GII rankings of 146 countries for the reporting year 2011.

Rankings

The 2017 rankings for all scored countries based on are:
GII RankHDI RankCountryGII Value
12Switzerland0.039
211Denmark0.040
310Netherlands0.044
37Sweden0.044
51Norway0.048
517Belgium0.048
725Slovenia0.054
815Finland0.058
96Iceland0.062
1022South Korea0.063
1121Luxembourg0.066
129Singapore0.067
1320Austria0.071
145Germany0.072
1526Spain0.080
1624France0.083
1732Cyprus0.085
1828Italy0.087
1941Portugal0.088
2012Canada0.092
2122Israel0.098
2219Japan0.103
233Australia0.109
234Ireland0.109
2514United Kingdom0.116
2631Greece0.120
2730Estonia0.122
2835Lithuania0.123
2927Czechia0.124
2946Croatia0.124
3153Belarus0.130
3233Poland0.132
3250Montenegro0.132
3416New Zealand0.136
3580Macedonia0.149
3686China0.152
3777Bosnia and Herzegovina0.166
38108Libya0.170
3938Slovakia0.180
4067Serbia0.181
4113United States0.189
4241Latvia0.196
4358Kazakhstan0.197
4437Qatar0.206
4529Malta0.216
4651Bulgaria0.217
4743Bahrain0.222
48112Moldova0.226
4934United Arab Emirates0.232
5039Saudi Arabia0.234
5139Brunei0.236
5268Albania0.238
5349Russian Federation0.257
5445Hungary0.259
5583Armenia0.262
5648Oman0.264
5755Uruguay0.270
5756Kuwait0.270
59105Uzbekistan0.274
6058Barbados0.284
6188Ukraine0.285
6257Malaysia0.287
6395Tunisia0.298
6463Costa Rica0.300
6573Cuba0.301
6592Mongolia0.301
67116Viet Nam0.304
6852Romania0.311
69127Tajikistan0.317
6964Turkey0.317
7180Azerbaijan0.318
7244Chile0.319
7369Trinidad and Tobago0.324
7490Saint Lucia0.333
7554Bahamas0.340
76101Maldives0.343
7674Mexico0.343
7870Georgia0.350
7992Fiji0.352
8076Sri Lanka0.354
8147Argentina0.358
82104Samoa0.365
8389Peru0.368
8465Mauritius0.373
85158Rwanda0.381
8580Lebanon0.381
8790Colombia0.383
8886Ecuador0.385
89106Belize0.386
90113South Africa0.389
91121El Salvador0.392
91122Kyrgyzstan0.392
9383Thailand0.393
9479Brazil0.407
9597Jamaica0.412
9698Tonga0.416
97113Philippines0.427
98101Botswana0.434
99100Suriname0.441
10085Algeria0.442
101115Egypt0.449
102118Bolivia0.450
104116Indonesia0.453
10578Venezuela0.454
106124Nicaragua0.456
106148Myanmar0.456
10895Jordan0.460
109133Honduras0.461
109139Laos0.461
10960Iran0.461
10966Panama0.461
113110Paraguay0.467
114185Burundi0.471
115129Namibia0.472
116146Cambodia0.473
117134Bhutan0.476
118149Nepal0.480
119123Morocco0.482
120127Guatemala0.493
121173Ethiopia0.502
122125Guyana0.504
123120Iraq0.506
124164Senegal0.515
125144Zambia0.517
126162Uganda0.523
127130India0.524
128110Gabon0.534
128156Zimbabwe0.534
130154Tanzania0.537
131140Ghana0.538
131143Sao Tome and Principe0.538
133150Pakistan0.541
134136Bangladesh0.542
135159Lesotho0.544
136155Syrian Arab Republic0.547
137142Kenya0.549
138180Mozambique0.552
139167Sudan0.564
140165Togo0.567
141144Eswatini0.569
141151Cameroon0.569
143137Congo0.578
144168Haiti0.601
145183Burkina Faso0.610
146163Benin0.611
147159Mauritania0.617
148171Malawi0.619
149174Gambia0.623
150184Sierra Leone0.645
151189Niger0.649
152176Democratic Republic of the Congo0.652
153168Afghanistan0.653
154181Liberia0.656
155170Côte d'Ivoire0.663
156188Central African Republic0.673
157182Mali0.678
158186Chad0.708
160178Yemen0.834

Top ten countries

The ten highest-ranked countries in terms of gender equality according to the GII for 2008, 2011, and 2012.
2018 .
2018: 9th is Iceland, 10th is Republic of Korea.
Ranking of other countries worth noting: Canada is no. 18, Australia is no. 25, China is no. 39 and United States is no. 42.
CountryGII Rank
2018
GII Rank 2012GII Value 2012HDI Rank 2012GII Rank 2011GII Value 2011GII Rank 2008GII Value 2008
Netherlands4 10.045420.05210.174
Sweden2 20.055710.04930.212
Denmark2 30.0571530.06020.209
Switzerland1 40.057940.06740.228
Norway5 50.065160.07550.234
Finland7 60.0752150.07580.248
Germany19 70.075570.08570.240
Bulgaria48 80.0821****
France8 100.08320100.106110.260
Belgium6 90.068****GHS

Countries not includedhttp://news.ltn.com.tw/news/life/breakingnews/1113684 台灣性別平等 2012排名全球第2, [Liberty Times], 2014-09-23

Bottom ten countries

The ten lowest ranked countries in terms of gender equality according to the GII for 2008, 2011, and 2012.
2018 .
CountryGII Rank
2018
GII Value 2012HDI Rank 2012GII Rank 2011GII Value 2011GII Rank 2008GII Value 2008
Yemen162 0.747160--------
Afghanistan143 0.7121751410.7171340.797
Niger154 0.7071861440.7241360.807
Congo156 0.6811861420.71016900.814
Liberia155 0.6581741390.6711310.766
Central African Republic159 0.6541801380.6691320.768
Mali158 0.6491821430.7121350.799
Sierra Leone153 0.6431771370.6621250.756
Mauritania150 0.643155--------

Critique

Although the GII is a relatively new index that has only been in use since 2010, there are some criticisms of the GII as a global measurement of gender inequality. The GII may inadequately capture gender inequality and leave out important aspects or include unnecessary dimensions. The GII is a complex indicator with many components that are difficult for some to interpret or calculate.

Complexity

Klasen and Schüler as well as Permanyer argue that the complexity of the GII will make it difficult to interpret or understand for the professionals who would likely want to make use of it because so many non-linear procedures are applied to the data. Permanyer believes that simplicity is required in order for analysts, policy-makers, or practitioners to convey a clear message to the general public.
Klasen and Schüler claim that the GII is meant to represent a loss of human development, but the standard against which the losses are measured is not stated anywhere, unlike the GDI where the losses were measured against the HDI, making the HDI represent perfect equality. The UNDP explains that the complexity of the calculations are needed in order to maintain an association-sensitive measure, but Permanyer argues that alternative indices that are much less complex have also shown to be association sensitive.

Mix of indices

Both Klausen and Schüler as well as Permanyer argue that the GII mixes indices in a few ways which furthers the complexity and poses other issues.The measurement combines well-being and empowerment which becomes problematic in that it increases the complexity, lacks transparency, and suffers from the problem of using an arithmetic means of ratios. Permanyer argues that it also combines two different, absolute and relative, indicators within the same formula. For example, if the MMR is higher than 10 per 100,000 it is considered inequality. Yet, parliamentary representation is only considered inequality if there is a deviation from 50 percent. Therefore, if women and men fare equally in all dimensions the GII would not equal a zero value as it should.
Permanyer gives an example for this problem:

Regional relevance

Permanyer also criticizes the GII for whether or not its assessment of gender inequality, and uses of the same set of indicators, are equally relevant or meaningful across all regions of the Globe. For less-developed countries the use of the MMR and AFR in the dimension of reproductive health may be penalizing although the loss may not be entirely explained by gender inequality. Less-developed countries performance in the reproductive health dimension may differ regionally or locally. Access to or use of health services can be influenced by socio-economic levels, public health policies, or social and cultural practices. In developed countries, specifically European countries, gender inequality levels are not very "robust to alternative specifications of gender-related indicators" and analysts and policy makers may choose specific methods to yield desired results.

Choice of variables

Klasen and Schüler briefly criticize the GII for its failure to capture the informal work and unpaid domestic or care work where women are primarily over-represented. In many underdeveloped societies women and girls spend the majority of their time in domestic work whereas men and boys spend far less, if any. Therefore, the if the GII lacks the capturing of the time women spend in unpaid labor, it is insufficient in capturing the true global disparities of women.