What happens when government budgets fail to reflect commitments to gender equality?
Our latest briefing paper examines exactly this, focusing on Ethiopia and Uganda, where reductions in gender-responsive public spending in health, education, and social protection are widening the gap between policy promises and lived reality.
Both governments have ratified the Maputo Protocol, CEDAW, and the Abuja Declaration, however, their budget allocations to social protection and women’s rights priorities suggest otherwise. Gender directorates in Ethiopia remain chronically underfunded, and the human cost is stark: Ethiopia ranks fourth globally for child marriage, and survivors of gender-based violence continue to face barriers in accessing services . In Uganda, maternal mortality remains at 207 per 100,000 live births, reflecting persistent gaps in investment in women’s health and social protection systems.
The findings are clear: when governments underinvest in gender equality, it is not numbers on a spreadsheet that suffer. It is women’s lives.
This research calls on governments, civil society, and communities to reimagine how budgets are built, placing the socio-economic rights of women and girls at the center.
We invite you to read the full research and join the conversation.
This publication is made possible through the support of the KOMBOA Consortium in partnership with SIHA Network. The research was authored by Dr. Lyn Ossome.
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