Remarks on Evidence and Impact: Closing the Gender Data Gap
Remarks
Gallup
Washington, DC
July 19, 2012
Thank
you very much. Well, it’s wonderful being here with all of you today,
and I want to start by thanking Gallup for co-sponsoring this conference
with the State Department and hosting us here this morning. Jim Clifton
told me that this used to be the convention center in Washington in the
late 1880s and that men would come here and tie their horses up down
below and have all kinds of meetings. So it’s great that we’re back here
today, and I am grateful to Jim Clifton and his team for joining us to
highlight the urgent need for more and better information about women
and gender equality around the world.
I’m pleased that so many thinkers and leaders in this field are here
today. You’ve just heard from one of them, Dr. Jim Kim, the new
President of the World Bank, and we’re so pleased that he’s in this
position; Cheryl Mills, my chief of staff and counselor at the State
Department who has really driven this process forward inside the State
Department; and so many of you who are here with us today – all the
panelists who will participate in today’s discussion and everyone who
will leave here committed to following through on what we have said.
Now, I am sure when you received an invitation to a conference on
data -- (laughter) -- you probably thought, “Oh, boy, how exciting.” But
I think you would agree, even having just heard from the prior three
speakers, this really is an exciting time for data, because we are
living in the midst of a data revolution. Massive amounts of information
are being shared faster, through more channels, and reaching more
people in more places than ever. Now, globally, Twitter users generate
340 million tweets every day. And some of you are probably tweeting as I
speak right now. (Laughter.) Remember, it is #gendergap. (Laughter.)
Companies around the world catalog billions and billions of customer
transactions in a matter of minutes. Governments crunch census data to
determine the makeup, habits, and challenges of entire countries or
specific communities.
Some measures suggest the world created as much as 1.8 zettabytes –
that was a new term to me – zettabytes of data last year. To put this in
perspective, you would need more than 57 billion 32 gig iPads to hold
all that information.
But are we just collecting it for the sake of collecting it? Data
only becomes valuable when it is organized and put to work. And before
we make big decisions – in business, in government, in life – we should
do the research, run the numbers. It’s how we minimize risk and maximize
impact.
And data are making a huge difference in diplomacy and development
already. MIT’s Engineering and Social Systems lab is doing pioneering
work modeling the growth of slum areas. For instance, in parts of
Africa, they did it by combining data from mobile phone networks with
information from the Kenyan census. Now urban planners can use that
model to figure out where to install water pumps and toilets so that as
many people as possible can use them. Instead of having a powerful
person in a slum demand that the toilet be put in a certain place
because that’s where he wants it, now you can equip decision makers both
locally within the slum itself as well as in local government to be
able to say, “But more people will use it if we move it over there.” It
sounds like a small thing; it’s revolutionary.
Or take Together for Girls, a public-private partnership the State
Department helped build to prevent sexual violence against children. In
many places, there is simply no information about how widespread the
problem is, so we support collecting data at the national level. In
Tanzania, for example it was found that almost 30 percent of girls and
over 10 percent of boys have suffered an unwanted sexual experience. The
Government of Tanzania then used this data to develop and implement a
national plan to prevent violence against children. Concrete action is
possible when we understand the scope and scale of a problem.
We keep statistics on everything we care about, from RBIs to ROI, the
daily ups and downs of the Dow and our bank accounts. So if we’re
serious about narrowing the gender gap and helping more girls and women,
then we must get serious about gathering and analyzing the data that
tell the tale.
Now, the data already provides strong evidence that demonstrates the
links between gender equality and increased prosperity and security.
This has been a real focus for us at the State Department. We have been
clear from day one that when we’re making the case for elevating the
roles of women, we can’t just rely on moral arguments as important and
compelling as they might be. We have to make a rigorous case, backed up
with solid evidence and data.
Last September at the first ever APEC Women and the Economy Summit in
San Francisco, I shared the compelling evidence mostly collected by the
World Bank that demonstrates how women jumpstart and then drive
economic growth around the world. As I said then, when we liberate the
economic potential of women, we elevate the economic performance of
communities, nations, and the world. And in these tough economic times,
none of us can afford to perpetuate the barriers facing women in the
workforce. And you combine that with the information Jim Clifton
provided, which is constant through Gallup data that the most important
thing to people in the world is a good job with a decent income to
support themselves and their families. And leaders and governments
around the world have started taking action, because you can’t deny the
data.
Now, we’re not just focused on economic growth. In December of last
year, I also spoke about the important role that women play in fostering
global stability. While more limited than our economic data, there is
evidence showing that women make unique contributions during peace
negotiation processes. And afterwards, they provide vital support to
bring peace agreements to life in local communities and to help build
lasting security. All these data went into creating the U.S. National
Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security, which is our government-wide
roadmap for accelerating and institutionalizing our work to bring more
women into all aspects of peace building and conflict prevention.
Now, these speeches called for bold ideas, for changing the way we
approach business, global stability, economic growth, as well as how we
approach diplomacy and development in the 21st century. Today I want to look more closely at how we can use data to inform and shape this work.
As we strive to achieve our foreign policy goals and to advance
American global leadership by building peace, promoting democracy,
growing economies, we already know that investing in women delivers
returns for entire societies. But we are missing critical information to
guide our investments better.
As Jim just said, for too many countries we lack reliable and regular
data on even the basic facts about the lives of women and girls – facts
like when they have their first child, how many hours of paid and
unpaid work they do, whether they own the land they farm. And since
women make up half the population, that’s like having a black hole at
the center of our data-driven universe.
It keeps us from fully realizing how advancing the status of women
affects women, their families, their communities, their countries, and
the rest of us. And it keeps those of us looking to close the gender gap
from getting the most out of our investments from either the public or
the private or the not-for-profit sector. Because ultimately data are a
means to an end to a more peaceful, prosperous world where women are
full participants who, like men, can reach their God-given potential.
And we now have an opportunity we’ve never had before. The
technological advances of this century give us a chance to gather
unprecedented amounts and types of information that can guide our
decisions and help maximize our impact. Now let me hasten to add that we
must of course be thoughtful and careful about how we do this and take
care to protect the information we collect. We need the data, but we
have to respect the rights of the people behind the data. So today I
want to talk about the historic opportunity we have to improve the lives
of billions of people and what it will take to seize that.
I’ll start with the story of one of my personal heroes: Ela Bhatt,
the founder of the Self-Employed Women’s Association in India. She
earned her law degree in the early 1950s at a time when not many women
were in the law and certainly not many women in India. She used her
degree to work for a local textiles labor union, but the law only
granted rights and recognitions to industrialized laborers. All around
her, she saw plenty of women doing lots of work in the informal economy.
Ela learned that only 6 percent of women in India were officially
counted as employed. And she recognized that the first step to helping
women who were obviously very hardworking but invisible to business and
government would be to bring their work into public view. Now, one easy
way to prove the economic value of women in the informal economy would
be to ask them all to take the week off – (laughter) – and just see what
happens. But Ela Bhatt had a better idea. She convinced researchers to
collect and analyze data about all the work people – mostly women – were
actually doing from their homes.
And once the numbers came out, policy makers couldn’t ignore them.
And in 1996, thanks in large part to Ela’s leadership, the International
Convention on Home Work recognized the rights and contributions of
those who work from their homes and established new standards for
employment conditions.
Data not only measures progress, it inspires it. As we have learned
in this country, what gets measured gets done. Once you start measuring
problems, people are more inclined to take action to fix them because
nobody wants to end up at the bottom of a list of rankings.
So data are critical on both sides of the question – knowing what to
do, and how to do it. And we want to achieve the best outcomes for women
and men, girls and boys, because after all, if our investments aren’t
helping us meet that goal, we need to change our approach. For example,
there is evidence that boys in some countries are falling behind girls
in primary school enrollment. Once in secondary school, however, girls
are more likely to drop out. With more and better data and analysis, we
can understand the nuances that could point us toward more targeted and
effective solutions to both problems.
So the question for us and for our work on improving gender equality
becomes: What do we know, and perhaps more important, what don’t we
know?
The good news is we know more than we used to. For a long time, basic
information about women was hiding in plain sight. But thanks to UN
agencies, the World Economic Forum, the OECD, the World Bank,
international NGOs, and research institutes, we now have a range of
tools that are helping us understand the circumstances of women around
the world and to quantify the social and economic benefits of gender
equality. And today, as you heard, Dr. Kim launched an important
addition to our toolkit – a gender data portal that will further sharpen
our understanding of the gender gap.
The U.S. Government is also focused on filling in the gaps. Last
year, for example, I launched the EDGE initiative – Evidence and Data
for Gender Equality – to improve sex-disaggregated data on
entrepreneurship and assets in developing countries, two areas where our
information is particularly lacking. We also helped launch the OECD’s
Gender Initiative, which is gathering data on women in poverty, in
science education, in management, and providing a toolbox of policy
ideas. Everything we have learned from these new studies paints a
picture that is sobering, but also hopeful.
The Human Development Report finds that inequalities between men and
women can reduce a country’s overall progress in health, education, and
standard of living by up to 85 percent. This points to a tremendous
opportunity. Elevating the status of women and girls has been shown to
have a positive impact on entire societies. And in country after
country, education improves, spending on nutrition and health increases,
productivity goes up, economies grow.
Just as investing in women and gender equality has a multiplying
effect that brings about positive results for entire societies,
investing in collecting and analyzing data on women and gender equality
can exponentially increase those benefits.
Now, even with the strong evidence on the benefits of women’s
participation in the economy, there are still lots of gaps in our
understanding. We know, for example, that 2.3 billion people around the
world have access to the internet. We don’t know how many of them are
women. That means researchers don’t have data to study how women in
developing countries use the internet to educate themselves, to start or
run a business, or to find the information they need to tend to the
health and well-being of their families.
We also have studies suggesting that eliminating barriers to women’s
participation in certain industries or levels of management could
increase the productivity of all workers from 3 to 25 percent. That’s a
huge range, and it encompasses vastly different countries and any number
of economic barriers. For example, what are the barriers in Indonesia,
and how are they different from the barriers in Nigeria? More
gender-sensitive data and analysis could tell us.
If women farmers had access to the same seeds, equipment, irrigation
as men farmers, they could increase their crop yields 20 to 30 percent
and feed up to an additional 150 million hungry people. Yet we lack
critical information on women’s land use, property rights, and access to
seeds and fertilizer. Without the data, it is difficult to address
these issues, which means we’re likely leaving much-needed value on the
table.
We need more data in areas related to women’s political participation
and in their role in peace building. We know how many women sit in
national parliaments, but what about local and regional bodies? We have
very strong data from India, and some evidence from other countries,
that women leaders are more likely to direct spending toward
infrastructure related to women’s roles and responsibilities, like
better drinking water and sanitation. But we need to learn more about
the ways and degree to which greater representation by women influence
public spending and public choices, as well as the overall efficiency of
the outcomes that are sought.
So we have strong evidence that women play roles in all kinds of
things, and in particular in peacekeeping and conflict prevention. They
raise issues in these kinds of negotiations, like human rights and human
security, that are fundamental to forging a lasting and sustainable
peace. But we need more internationally comparable data to examine how
women’s contributions affect conflict regions. And only then can we
really create frameworks for making sure they are included.
Now, such examples as these only scratch the surface. To put it
simply, we have neither invested enough in collecting gender-sensitive
data nor in quantifying how increasing gender equality yields benefits
to societies. So we have to push, not only for more data, but better
data – data that illuminates the challenges and opportunities that women
and girls face, on their own and relative to men and boys, and their
effect on shared stability and prosperity. And we have to ask questions
we’ve never asked before and make sure we’re asking them the right way.
To achieve the benefits of this new age of participation, an era when
every person on the planet will eventually be connected up in some way,
we must find ways to lower the barriers that are still in legal
systems, cultural taboos, economic discrimination, educational problems.
That will give us a better chance of not only solving the problems but
doing so in a sustainable and strategic way. So we are seeking the
sufficient information needed to guide us.
Now, this room is filled with experts and researchers and
practitioners at the forefront of addressing our data gender gap, and
it’s because of many of you that we have made the progress we have seen
in the last few years. But we need to keep going and to be champions of
the widespread movement for gender-sensitive data. As we fill these
gaps, then we have to put the data we collect to use, improving outcomes
and creating real changes in people’s lives. So what should be our next
steps?
First, let’s dedicate the resources to collect new data, analyze and
publish the data we already have. That takes time and commitment, and it
does take political will at the highest levels to make gender-sensitive
data a priority for donor and partner governments, corporations,
foundations, research institutions, and multilateral organizations. It
will also take coordination across these groups to ensure the questions
we ask, the data we collect, the measures we use are compatible and
comparable to each other.
Next, we need to capitalize on 21st century tools for collecting and
analyzing information, like behavioral economics, which looks at the
social, cognitive, even emotional factors that affect people’s
decisions, or the vast amounts of data that social media provide. We
must find opportunities for innovative public-private partnerships to
harness new technologies and reduce the overall cost of collecting and
analyzing data.
And then for our efforts to be sustainable, we need to build the
capacity of national statistics bureaus and share with future data
scientists and policymakers the value and methods of gender-sensitive
data.
So today, I’m pleased to announce a new initiative that will help
carry today’s work forward. We’re calling it Data 2X – a symbol of the
power women have to multiply progress in their societies. With
contributions from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and USAID,
Data 2X will develop new curriculum standards to ensure data producers
and users train in gender-sensitive techniques. Working with key data
organizations, including the UN, World Bank, OECD, PARIS21, and Gallup,
the project will also publish a roadmap on how we together can fill
priority gaps in gender-sensitive data as quickly as possible. And, in
keeping with the spirit of this conference, Data 2X will report on its
progress in one year’s time.
I hope this set of commitments, as well as the significant challenges
that we are and will be discussing today, inspire others to action as
well.
In my time as Secretary of State, I have – as you may have read –
traveled a lot of miles and visited many countries. (Laughter.) But it’s
not the miles I remember. It’s the people along the way, like the
remarkable women who have overcome backbreaking poverty to build
communities of their own, or heroes who have refused to buckle or back
down in the face of threats and intimidation.
Everything I have done and everything I have learned in my work over
the years has convinced me that improving the rights and the status of
women is not simply a matter of human dignity, although it certainly is.
It is also essential to our shared prosperity and security. We will not
be able to move forward on any of our larger strategic goals or improve
our security here at home unless we take on the fundamental instability
and strife that inequality creates in our world. That’s one of the
reasons we have put women at the heart of our foreign policy priorities
at the State Department. It’s the right thing to do, and it is also the
smart thing to do.
Getting the gender-sensitive data we need is a critical starting
point. That will help act as a blueprint for building a better future
for us all. It will help move toward finishing the unfinished business
of helping more women become full and equal participants in every aspect
of society.
I look forward to working with all of you to make that future not
only a measurable and quantifiable one but an undeniable reality. There
is so much that we can do together. And I thank Gallup, which has been
at this business longer than most of us, for reminding us that sometimes
our own views and perspectives are not reflective of the aspirations,
feelings, and experiences of other people. And one of the great
challenges for all of us is to continue to put ourselves in the other’s
shoes, to try to walk those miles, here in our own country and certainly
around the world. That gives us more insight and empathy and better
equips us to make decisions for ourselves and others that will be closer
to being right and will stand the test of time.
Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
I love how, in her conclusion, she managed to tie this initiative to the Walk a Mile initiative mentioned here.
Hillary Clinton is a master at weaving seemingly disparate issues,
objectives, and projects into a cloth. Like a genius textile worker!