Women at work: Gender quotas, municipal elections and local spending

Francesco Andreoli, Elena Manzoni, Margherita Margotti

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Gender quotas should foster women's presence in politics, which in turn may affect local policymaking. This paper investigates this mechanism, considering indicators of municipality spending in Italy as relevant policy outcomes. For identification, we rely on the time and geographic variation in the introduction of a gender quota reform by Law 215/2012. The reform affected gender composition of candidates in Italian municipal council elections, resulting in an increase of the share of female councilors of about 13.9 percentage points. Using the reform as an instrument, we estimate that a one percentage point increase in female participation in councils rises expenditure for local security by about 1% and reduces administration costs by a comparable amount, whereas evidence on the impact on other local expenditure items is mixed and not significant. Estimated effects are associated with compositional changes in terms of employment status of female councilors and are robust to endogeneity issues, to relevant sample selections and to the implications of confounding policies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102175
JournalEuropean Journal of Political Economy
Volume75
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Bibliographical note

This work was supported by the Luxembourg Fonds National de la Recherche [IMCHILD grant INTER/NORFACE/16/11333934 and PREFER-ME CORE grant C17/SC/11715898 ], the University of Verona [Ricerca di Base grants MOBILIFE-2017-RBVR17KFHX and PREOPP-2019-RBVR19FSFA ], and by MIUR [ PRIN 2017K8ANN4 : “New approaches to Political Economy: from methods to data”].

Keywords

  • Gender bias
  • Italy
  • Law 215/2012
  • Local policy
  • Municipal budget
  • Municipal council

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