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Financing For Gender Equality
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TYPE OF CONTENT

  • Resources 3
  • Highlights 1

THEME

  • Planning and Budgeting 4
  • Taxation 4
  • Development Effectiveness 1
  • Public Finance Management 1
  • Tracking Budget and Expenditures 1

RESOURCE TYPE

  • Assessments and Analysis 3
  • Case Studies 1
  • Policy 1
  • Research 1

REGION

  • Asia and the Pacific 2
  • Global 2

COUNTRY

  • Australia 1
  • Timor-Leste 1

RELATED LANGUAGE

  • English 2
FOUND 4 RESULTS
2018 FFD Forum Expert Session on Gender Equality
2018 marked the first year gender equality was featured as part of the main Financing for Development (FFD) Forum programme. An expert session brought together three leading experts to review trends in financing for gender equality and explore options to increase fiscal space at the national and local level.
Gender Budgeting IMF working paper
This IMF Working Paper examines how public processes can contribute to improving women's status. Gender budgeting, which refers to the systematic examination of budget programs and policies for their impact on women, has been tried in a range of countries in recent years. This study attempts to show that gender budgeting is just good budgeting; budgeting that properly accounts for the positive externalities that are derived from improving women's opportunities for health care, education, and...
Tax Reform for Timor-Leste A New Value Added Tax
Governments raise tax revenues so that they can meet the needs of the people they represent. Fair and equal taxation makes sure that tax laws do not discriminate against people who live traditional lives, subsistence farmers, rural business owners, women, or the poor
The Female-Friendliest Treasurer of them All (taxation in Australia)
The document provides a gender analysis of the Australian Treasurer's 2006/2007 budgetary changes by examining the gender impacts of newly introduced tax concessions. It identifies the groups most able to take advantage of these as being income and flexible-asset rich Australians (which include relatively few women).The paper concludes by identifying the elements of a budgetary approach that would contribute to a more female- friendly retirement incomes policy.
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