A woman's place is in the White House: Don Pittis - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:58 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
BusinessAnalysis

A woman's place is in the White House: Don Pittis

Trump's economic strategy is to go back to a world that no longer exists feminist economists insist. They say future success means looking at the world in a brand new way.

The growing influence of feminist economics may be just what Trump's America actually needs

Young women protest against the election of Donald Trump as U.S. president. Feminist economists says work traditionally done by women isn't counted in national accounts. (Elijah Nouvelage/Reuters)

Economics may still be a man's world, but it doesn't have to be that way.

Despite Donald Trump's victory over Hillary Clinton in last week's U.S. presidential election, an alternative way of looking at the economy called feminist economics claims to offersolutionsfar more appropriate to the problems the United States faces.

In the rush to boost growthour leaders have been asking the wrong questions, and not just in the U.S., says self-described feminist economist Marjorie Cohen.

More stuff needed?

"What are the things that people need?" asks Cohen, professor emeritus at Simon Fraser University. "Do we really need more and more stuff?"

That doesn't mean feminist economists are all anti-materialistleftists. Cohen says stuff is important, too. And one of the earliest thinkers on the subject, Marilyn Waring, was a member of Parliament for the right-leaning New Zealand National Party.
When Afghan women are given money they spend most of it on their children, while Afghan men spend on status symbols, feminist economics research shows. (Josh Smith/Reuters)

Waring, who nearly30 years ago wrote the groundbreaking book If Women Counted, will be speaking via Skype at the Parkland Institute's fall conference, Shifting Gears:Transitioning to the Future Economyin Edmonton this week.

Cohen, who will speakat the same conference, saysfeminist economists come from the entire economic spectrum.

Waring'sradical observation in 1988,which seems obvious when you think about it, was that so many essential things that women have traditionally done to make the world a better placeare simply not accounted for in economic statistics like gross national product.

Uncounted and dismissed

Twenty-eight years later, they still aren't.

Unlike banking and gold mining,child-rearing and looking after grandpa aredismissed by conventional economics as completely different from money-making services.

"These are things that can power an economy too, but we always treat them in our economic analysis as expenditures, as if they are not part of the economy," says Cohen. "Those industries are as much a part of the economy that can generate growth as are the other sectors that are more material."

One of the basic arguments is that undervaluing the contribution of women is no accident. The founding arguments of economics were formulated by men, and a glance at lists of university economics departments show most continue to be dominated by men.

The Hillary Doctrine

Thingswomen think areimportant, includingnurturing, caring, communicating, negotiating, comforting, as well as community and education, makeour lives better. If society undervalues those things, say feminist economists,then we may be spending our scarce resources in the wrong places.
Hillary Clinton's strategy to reduce global conflict by empowering women never became a topic in an election dominated by hot-button issues like email irregularities. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

That may be even more important in a post-industrial world, where machines make more of the physical stuff.

On Friday, when I spoke with Patricia Leidl, the Canadian co-author of the book The Hillary Doctrine: Sex and American Foreign Policy, she was still jet-lagged,having just arrived home from working on a project in Afghanistan.

Leidl says whether you are trying to improve the lives of underprivileged people in one of the world's poorest countries or in the richest, the same lesson applies.

"If you want to promote prosperity and reduce poverty then you have to empower women," she says. "When you invest in women you invest in the health of the economy as a whole."

She says the reason is the difference between how men and women spend money.

"When you give a woman money, most of them will spend most of the resources on health care, their children, strengthening the community, education, whereas men are much more likely to spend the bulk of their income on status symbols, cars, TVs," she says.

Leidl's co-author, Valerie Hudson, wowed the U.S. military with research showing sex selection in societies that preferred boy children led to greater war and armed conflict.

In The Hillary Doctrine, the twowrote about Clinton's plan to use the principles of feminist economics to reduce global conflict.Empowering women made countries less likely to go to war with the United States and its allies. It was a subject that got little attention in the recent election.

Wrong!

Leidl is frankly devastated by the election of Trump, fearing that it willreverse years of good work, effectivelytaking money out of war prevention to spend on arms.She says the world needed a woman in the White House.

"It's a catastrophe," she says.
Trump supporters hark back to a time when the U.S. was a metal-bashing powerhouse, but the world now has tonnes of excess steel in storage. (Tyrone Siu/Reuters)

Cohen also fearsTrump willtakethe United States in exactly the wrong direction.

With a woman and a feminist at the helm, the U.S. might have spent its resources on the kind of human infrastructure that would improve people's lives. Instead, she says, Trump is trying to rebuild a dirty-energy and metal-bashing economy that is just never coming back.

"The scary part of this is that it's harking back to an economy in the United States that was vibrant in the '50s and '60s. It's harking back to something old that does not meet the needs of the current world," says Cohen. "That'snot where the world is now."

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysis by Don Pittis