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      Revisiting the patriarchal bargain: The intergenerational power dynamics of household money management in rural Nepal

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          Highlights

          • We analyzed the intergenerational power dynamics of money management in rural households in contemporary Nepal.

          • We found that junior wives and husbands often became secret allies in seeking financial autonomy from their in-laws.

          • Intergenerational power relations may be just as important as male-female power relations for women’s economic empowerment.

          Abstract

          Although power struggles between daughters-in-law and mothers-in-law in the South Asian household remain an enduring theme of feminist scholarship, current policy discourse on ‘women’s economic empowerment’ in the Global South tends to focus on married women’s power over their husband; this neglects intergenerational power dynamics. The aim of this study was to describe and analyze the processes involved in young, married women’s negotiations of control over cash inside the extended household in a contemporary rural Nepali setting. We conducted a grounded theory study of 42 households from the Plains of Nepal. Our study uncovered multiple ways in which junior wives and husbands in the extended household became secret allies in seeking financial autonomy from the rule of the mother-in-law to the wife. This included secretly saving up for a household separation from the in-laws. We argue these secret financial strategies constitute a means for junior couples to renegotiate the terms of Kandiyoti’s (1988) ‘patriarchal bargain’ wherein junior wives traditionally had to accept subservience to their husband and mother-in-law in exchange for economic security and eventual authority over their own daughters-in-law. Researchers, activists and policy-makers concerned with women’s economic empowerment in comparable contexts should consider the impact of intergenerational power relations on women’s control over cash.

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          Most cited references54

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          Estimating wealth effects without expenditure data—or tears: An application to educational enrollments in states of India

          Using data from India, we estimate the relationship between household wealth and children’s school enrollment. We proxy wealth by constructing a linear index from asset ownership indicators, using principal-components analysis to derive weights. In Indian data this index is robust to the assets included, and produces internally coherent results. State-level results correspond well to independent data on per capita output and poverty. To validate the method and to show that the asset index predicts enrollments as accurately as expenditures, or more so, we use data sets from Indonesia, Pakistan, and Nepal that contain information on both expenditures and assets. The results show large, variable wealth gaps in children’s enrollment across Indian states. On average a “rich” child is 31 percentage points more likely to be enrolled than a “poor” child, but this gap varies from only 4.6 percentage points in Kerala to 38.2 in Uttar Pradesh and 42.6 in Bihar.
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            Resources, Agency, Achievements: Reflections on the Measurement of Women's Empowerment

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              BARGAINING WITH PATRIARCHY

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                World Dev
                World Dev
                World Development
                Pergamon Press
                0305-750X
                1 December 2018
                December 2018
                : 112
                : 193-204
                Affiliations
                Institute for Global Health, University College London, 30 Guilford Street, WC1N 1EH, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. lu.gram.13@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
                Article
                S0305-750X(18)30302-4
                10.1016/j.worlddev.2018.08.002
                6167740
                30510348
                3e625fb2-f70e-4e5d-ab28-3f6fe2875668
                © 2018 The Author(s)

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 11 August 2018
                Categories
                Article

                Economic development
                empowerment,power,agency,intergenerational relations,household finances,money management

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