4.3 Article

Women's Empowerment and Economic Development: A Feminist Critique of Storytelling Practices in Randomista Economics

Journal

FEMINIST ECONOMICS
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 1-26

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2020.1743338

Keywords

Empowerment; economic development; development

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The 2019 Nobel Prize in economics was awarded to three scholars on the grounds that their pioneering use of randomized control trials (RCTs) was innovative methodologically and contributed to development policy and the emergence of a new development economics. Using a critical feminist lens, this article challenges that conclusion by interrogating the storytelling practices deployed by randomista economists through a critical reading of a widely cited essay by Esther Duflo, one of the 2019 Nobel recipients, on the relationship between women's empowerment and economic development. The paper argues that the limitations of randomista economics have given rise to a particular way of thinking characterized by piecemeal analysis, ad hoc resort to theory, indifference to history and context, and methodological fundamentalism. It concludes that the randomista argument that broad-based economic development alone - without focused attention to women's rights - will lead to gender equality has not been borne out by recent data.

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