Home » Women’s Economic Rights: Why Legal Gaps Hurt Growth | Project Syndicate

Women’s Economic Rights: Why Legal Gaps Hurt Growth | Project Syndicate

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The World Bank reported today that no country provides women with the same legal rights as men, a disparity particularly acute in safety, entrepreneurship, and childcare, with significant consequences for economic growth in developing nations.

The findings echo a strategy pursued by Japan over a decade ago, when then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe launched “Abenomics” in 2012, a policy package that explicitly targeted increased female labor force participation as a key driver of economic revitalization. Facing a demographic crisis – a shrinking labor force – and prolonged economic stagnation, Abe’s government implemented reforms designed to remove barriers to women’s employment.

These reforms included expansions to childcare availability, enhanced parental leave policies, and tax incentives for companies actively promoting women in the workplace. By 2019, according to the World Bank report’s framing, these measures had demonstrably increased the number of women employed, with an additional 2.5 million women entering the workforce. Female labor force participation rose to 67%, and job placement rates for female graduates approached universal levels.

Abenomics, named for the Prime Minister, comprised three core elements, often referred to as “three arrows”: aggressive monetary policy, flexible fiscal policy, and structural reforms aimed at boosting competitiveness. The focus on women was a central component of the third “arrow,” the structural reforms. The Bank of Japan, under economists like Nobuhiro Abe, Director of the Financial System Research Division, was tasked with implementing and analyzing the monetary policies that underpinned the broader economic strategy.

The World Bank’s 2026 report underscores the economic costs of legal disparities, particularly in developing economies. While the report does not directly assess the long-term impact of Abenomics, it highlights the principle that removing obstacles to women’s economic participation yields positive economic outcomes. Japan remains a significant contributor to the World Bank, and its government is one of the largest donors to trust funds supporting development initiatives globally.

Shinzo Abe resigned in September 2020, and passed away in 2022. The long-term effects of Abenomics remain a subject of debate, but the World Bank’s latest report reinforces the core tenet of the policy: that legal equality for women is not merely a matter of social justice, but a critical component of sustainable economic growth.

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