International Policy Fellowship 2006-07
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Haroon Rafique
International Policy Fellow
Gender budgeting in Pakistan – issues and policy interventions 
Gender Budgeting is a good monitoring tool to determine the extent to which 
national budgets are designed to address the gender mainstreaming issue. It is 
usually believed that budgets are gender-neutral policy instruments. However, 
the ’gender-blind’ manner ignores the different, socially determined roles, 
responsibilities, and capabilities of women and men, whereby women tend to be 
disadvantaged, leaving them with less economic, social and political power 
compared to men. It is will not be incorrect to suggest that by making gender 
blind budgets the state unconsciously contributes to the gender inequality. In 
order to understand as how the usual and orthodox budgetary process exacerbates 
gender inequality the interrelationships between budgets, growth, gender 
inequality and poverty need to be highlighted.
Gender budgeting is not only of particular significance per se for gaining 
gender equality but it has a deeper significance for overall poverty reduction 
and meeting the specific numerical and time-bound Millennium Development Goals (MDG) 
particularly halving poverty by 2015. This can only be achieved if governments 
allocate adequate resources to ensure that women, who constitute more than fifty 
percent of population in Pakistan, have equal access to genuine entitlements 
that offer them equal opportunities to join in the mainstream and contribute to 
overall growth and development of a country.
The overall development objective of the gender reforms in Pakistan is to make 
women economically, socially and politically empowered through transforming 
gender relations to effectively create a society that fulfills its domestic and 
international obligations of a developmental state. 
The empowerment of a woman is not a linear and straight forward process. It is a 
policy monolithic created by a series of interconnected processes. It begins 
with the process of increasing awareness of her equitable potential, capacities 
and rights in an enabling environment. This environment is engendered by the 
mutual efforts of different stakeholders in which the commitment of government 
is the most important because traditionally the governments are considered as 
responsible for making investments in social sectors which have ends other than 
commercial interests as pursued by the private sector. All the policy 
formulation and implementation takes place within the government, albeit having 
inputs from various quarters such as civil society, pressure groups, media and 
advocacy campaigns. However, ultimate decision maker is the government or the 
state.
The role and commitment of state is also important in a reform effort, such as 
gender budgeting initiative, since reforms may seem maverick contested, 
complicated and political in nature. This posits brining a change in the 
political, legal, administrative, economic and social structure of a state which 
may be acceptable to some and may not be acceptable to others. Here lies the 
commitment of the state that if it believes in reforms, such as making a basis 
for the gender budgeting, then it should provide them with the sap and strength 
by its commitment.
The government in Pakistan is convinced that gender mainstreaming is necessary 
in order to make women equal partners and share holders in development. Various 
NGOs, civil society organizations and donors are promoting gender mainstreaming 
to help the government in this bid. However, these efforts can not reach 
fruition if the Government, as the major service delivery provider in the 
country, does not initiate focused interventions and investments towards 
achieving gender related development. 
As a first step of any government’s commitment to improve women lot adequate 
resource allocation occupies a pivotal position. The Government of Pakistan at 
present is following gender blind budgeting paradigm in which it is assumed that 
the budgetary allocations will automatically cater to the women needs. The poor 
development indicators on women literacy, health coverage and employment 
opportunities suggest that gender blind budgeting does not automatically 
translate into expending money on women development. 
This project therefore suggests that there is a need for shifting priorities in 
favor of gender sensitive budgeting at the Federal, Provincial and local level. 
In order to achieve this the problems and issues related to gender budgeting 
need to be identified and discussed to suggest possible solutions as how to 
introduce gender budgeting in Pakistan.
It is expected that the outcome and recommendation of this project would result 
in enlarging choices for the Government, NGOs, civil society, donors and women 
by transforming gender relations through formalizing women rights into financial 
policy instruments.