Gender Responsive Budgeting
National Economies and Commitments to Benefit from Gender Responsive Budgeting
Wednesday 14 June 2017 (Pacific) – Decision-makers around the region are being urged to match commitments on gender equality with increased and better targeted funding.
Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat Director for Policy, Sione Tekiteki made the call at a regional training workshop aimed at improving understanding of the financial benefits and impacts of spending on women and men, and planning gender responsive budgets.
“Generally in the Pacific region, targeted government spending on women is very low at around just one per cent of national budgets. This is not enough,” said Mr Tekiteki.
“Political and policy commitments for gender equality can only be achieved if sufficient funds are allocated for their implementation.”
The need for improved gender responsive budgeting was reiterated at the official opening of the workshop by UN Women’s Multi-Country Office Representative, Aleta Miller.
“We can only achieve an equal society if the needs of both women and men are reflected in our key policies such as budgets,” Ms Miller said.
“The workshop equips
the participants with the important tools to start
analysing, tracking and ensuring gender equality becomes
everyone’s business.”
Supported by the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, UNESCAP and UN Women, the Regional Gender Responsive Budget Workshop highlighted how improved budgeting benefits the growth of economies and the achievement of key commitments, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The regional workshop, held in Suva from 12-13 June, will assist participants to take a more systematic and structured approach to integrating gender into central planning and finance processes, and to identify good practice and useful methodologies to track allocation of resources for gender equality.
“It is quite an eye opener for me!”
said Jacob Manase, Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Planning - PNG Department for Community Development, adding
that: “you can have the best gender policy but if you
cannot fund it you’ll make no impact.”
Pauline Soaki,
Director of the Women’s Development Division - Solomon
Islands Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family
Affairs emphasized the responsibility for ministries to
close the gender gap.
“Gender responsive budgeting is
important because we must meet community needs, but
communities have men and women, and they have different
needs. We need to bring the financial controllers into the
gender equality conversation immediately, to ensure the
proportionate allocation of funding for
resources.”
Participants from across the Pacific
attended the workshop including civil society organisations,
development partners, UN agencies, regional organisations,
and senior government officials from 13 forum countries.