Organisations announce plans to make gender financing more transparent
Originally posted by the Brookings Institution, co-authored by Sally Paxton and George Ingram
At our launch event on July 8 for the report, “Making gender financing more transparent”, prominent stakeholders, including key donors for gender equality and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), made important commitments to make international funding towards gender equality more transparent.
In his welcoming remarks, George Ingram, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, reflected on the recent G-7 statement that robust data is a prerequisite for making progress towards gender equality—a statement that is especially relevant in the context of the $40 billion pledge to promote gender equality at the recent Generation Equality Forum (GEF).
Sally Paxton, US Representative to Publish What You Fund, highlighted the key findings and recommendations of the report—that despite great efforts made by donors and data platforms, it remains difficult to find detailed information about official development assistance (ODA) funding for gender equality programs, and even harder to track humanitarian, philanthropic, and development finance institution (DFI) gender-related funding. The report offers clear and actionable recommendations for donors and data platforms to address three key and interrelated issues: data capacity, data engagement, and data quality.
Gender data on both financing and programming is a critical foundation for progress. With it, we can track, coordinate, reallocate and learn what’s working and what’s not, and we can hold donors to account. But we need to improve this foundation.
– Sally Paxton, Publish What You Fund
The panel discussion included six gender equality and data experts from a range of organisations and perspectives, including: Louise Holt, Director General, Global Affairs Canada (GAC), Michele Sumilas, Assistant to the Administrator at Policy, Planning and Learning at United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Marijn Wiersma, Interim Gender Lead, CDC Group and 2X Challenge member, Tenzin Dolker, Resourcing Feminist Movements Coordinator, Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID), Amanda Austin, Head of Policy and Advocacy, Equal Measures 2030, and Lisa Williams, Team Lead and Senior Policy Analyst for OECD’s Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment.
The panel covered a number of issues, ranging from how to best track G-7 and GEF commitments to the need to empower local gender advocates with useable and accessible data to the lack of core funding to feminist and local groups. Most significantly, there were a series of plans and commitments announced, enumerated below, in connection with the G-7 or GEF and in response to key findings and recommendations in the report.
GAC. Canada has been a strong supporter of gender equality and the findings in the research about their data quality reflect that commitment. Despite the strong track record, Holt recognized that there are always ways to improve, including:
- A recognition of the importance and usefulness of having a search function by gender equality marker scores on their project browser. GAC is open to adding this tool to their already robust data. Such a marker makes filtering vast amounts of financing and programmatic data easier for users.
- As part of their contribution to GEF’s Action Coalition on Feminist Movements and Leadership, Canada will support the co-creation of the Global Alliance for Sustainable Feminist Movements, an emerging multi-stakeholder initiative that recognizes the critical role of women’s rights organisations and feminist movements in advancing gender equality worldwide, and the need for a platform dedicated to ensuring financial and political support for them.
USAID. The new Biden-Harris administration has established gender equity as a top priority across the whole of the government, both domestic and global. Included in new U.S. plans are:
- As part of the commitment to improve the comprehensiveness and the comparability of USAID’s data, Sumilas announced that USAID will start publishing its OECD gender-marker scores to the International Aid Transparency Initiative and its own portals.
- The U.S. will use a gender lens in its new G7 initiative, the ‘Build Back Better for the World infrastructure partnership’, thus taking into account the needs of women and girls, being mindful that sustainable outcomes require decisions based on solid data and information.
- The new U.S. Gender Equity and Equality Action (GEEA) Fund —with $100m in FY 2021 and a request of $200 million in the FY 2022 President’s Budget—will advance economic security for women and girls globally, prevent and respond to gender-based violence, and support underserved and marginalized populations. In addition, the GEEA Fund will help address the disproportionate impact that COVID-19, climate change, and conflict and crisis have on women and girls.
OECD. The OECD-Development Assistance Committee (DAC) gender equality policy marker is the most evolved and highly used of all gender markers across various data platforms. Williams focused on the various ways in which the OECD is working to improve how a number of organisations can improve gender equality financing. Williams highlighted that:
- The OECD-DAC is supporting donors to improve their practices on their gender equality financing and DAC data (including use of the gender policy marker) and will eventually update their gender marker handbook.
- The OECD-DAC would like to work together with different types of actors to think about ways forward on accountability from the GEF and their work more broadly.
2X Challenge and the CDC Group. The 2X Challenge was originally launched at the G-7 in 2017 with Canada as the host. The drive behind the 2X Challenge is to mobilize private sector investments in gender as defined by four clear criteria. Big commitments have been made over the years—at the G-7 this year, for example, the 2X Challenge committed $15 billion for gender equality over the next two years. As Wiersma stated, one of the key challenges is how to better share information on investments externally. Wiersma shared that:
- In order to better align with existing data platforms, and as announced at the GEF, the 2X Challenge has aligned with the OECD-DAC gender equality policy marker and the UN Women’s economic empowerment principles.
- The 2X Challenge will start conversations within its steering committees about how its members can share data on their gender equality investments externally.
- As a 2X Challenge member, the CDC Group is exploring setting an internal 2X target for its pipeline.
Funders should also be truly accountable to feminist movements who ensure that demands for gender equality are transformative, intersectional … being transparent is not just sharing information but truly sharing power—letting go and compromising.
– Tenzin Dolker, AWID
Equal Measures 2030. This partnership works across a range of actors around the value of data to address gender inequalities. Austin stressed that better outcomes and accountability means better engagement around the data, most notably with those whom these gender efforts are trying to help. To that end:
- Equal Measures 2030, together with ARROW, CREA, FEMNET, Equality Fund, and IWDA, have launched a collective commitment to explore a new poll survey of feminist movements. This effort aims to contribute to the accountability ecosystem around generation equality and to work with feminist movements from the start to design a regular survey that captures their expert insights on what progress—or lack thereof—is happening on Action Coalition themes.
All of these plans and commitments from these key gender equality stakeholders signal an important move in the right direction toward a more transparent and open gender financing data ecosystem. There are already significant commitments on the need to elevate gender equality work. The panelists underscored the need for the resources, capacity, and technical improvements to make data a strong foundation toward meeting Sustainable Development Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls, but the political will to make these gender investments effective and sustainable is essential. Top among political will priorities is the empowerment of local and women’s rights organisations—not just in the data but in the decisions around priorities, implementation, and results.
If you missed the webinar or would like to hear the thoughts of our panel again, you can watch it and read the transcript linked here.
The Gender Financing Project is implemented in partnership with Friends of Publish What You Fund and receives support from Plan International USA and Save the Children US.