This study critically investigates the suitability of United Nations’ composite indices and other related measures—among which the Gender Inequality Index just released in 2010—to capture gender inequalities in the context of ‘‘highly developed’’ countries, focusing on the case of Europe. Our results indicate that many of the gender gaps in health and education variables have either vanished or even reversed, thus questioning their appropriateness to capture women’s disadvantage in Europe and inviting to construct region-specific measures. Alternatively, parliamentary representation and labor force participation are variables with large gender gaps that highlight important dimensions where women disadvantage prevails. Different cross-section and cross-time associations between economic growth and gender equality are generally not statistically significant—or at most weakly correlated—at European level. This is basically due to the fact that the gender gaps included in UNDP gender-related indices reached their normatively desirable values long ago, therefore leaving no room for further improvement.
About (original language)
Website URL Address
Link to an external file
Public identifier
DOI 10.1007/s11205-011-9975-6
Type of resource
Geographic provenance
Date created
Is this resource freely shareable?
Shareable
Gender and Science taxonomy
Scientific discipline
Country coverage
Time period covered
2010-2011
Copyleft license
Creative Commons CC-BY-SA 3.0
Intended user group