4.5 Article

Electrification and Socio-Economic Empowerment of Women in India

Journal

ENERGY JOURNAL
Volume 43, Issue 2, Pages 215-238

Publisher

INT ASSOC ENERGY ECONOMICS
DOI: 10.5547/01956574.43.2.ased

Keywords

Women empowerment; Reliable electricity; Labor Market; Principal Component Analysis; Instrumental Variables

Funding

  1. Copenhagen School of Energy Infrastructure (CSEI)

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This study goes beyond measuring progress in gender energy parity solely based on the number of electrified households. By examining the impact of reliability of electricity on women's empowerment in terms of economic autonomy, agency, mobility, and decision-making abilities, this study highlights the labor market and respite effects of service reliability. It develops a comprehensive set of empowerment indices and assesses the causal effects of power outages on these indices.
This study moves beyond the consensus of counting electrified households as a measure of progress in gender energy parity. Using the India Human Development Survey, we examine the effect of reliability of electrification on empowerment of women in terms of economic autonomy, agency, mobility and decision-making abilities, underscoring the labor market and respite effects of service reliability. We develop a comprehensive set of empowerment indices using principal component analysis and assess the causal effects of power outages on the indices with instrumental variable regressions while controlling for individual, household, district and caste characteristics. Results show that reliability of electricity has significant positive effects on all empowerment indices and improves women's labor market outcomes, however, the effects differ at the margin of deficiency, location, living standards and education. The study recommends policy focus on electrification from a gendered lens for cost-effective solutions.

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