Hotter-than-usual years can slow or derail advances in women’s legal rights. A new analysis spanning five decades finds that temperature anomalies—years significantly hotter than a country’s historical norm—are associated with slower gains in legal equality for women, especially in low-income settings. The logic is simple but consequential: extreme-weather events tend to strain budgets and institutions, prompting governments to postpone the most fiscally demanding reforms. The result is a drag on women’s economic empowerment.
Climate change can interact with both women’s legal rights and the broader effects on women, creating feedback loops that influence policy priorities.Our study bridges two established facts: legal equality is foundational for inclusive growth and resilience; and extreme-weather events disrupt economies, squeeze public finances, and heighten pressure for short-term relief. The core question is whether such events also re-order policy priorities in ways that slow progress on women’s legal rights.
Using the World Bank’s Women, Business and the Law (WBL) database for 190 economies from 1970–2023, combined with high-resolution temperature and precipitation data, four findings stand out:
How big are the effects? In low-income countries, a one-unit increase in temperature anomaly is associated with a 1.5-point lower WBL index score (on a 0–100 scale). The effect is concentrated in costly reforms (−3.1 points)—those that expand women’s access to economic opportunities and demand substantial fiscal resources and administrative capacity, rather than reforms that simply remove discriminatory laws. This setback also persists for several years. Hotter-than-usual years drive these delays in Parenthood, Marriage, and Mobility reforms, whereas rainfall shocks show little effect (Figure 1).
Source: Women, Business and the Law database.
Note: Bars show estimated changes in WBL scores; lines show 95% confidence intervals.
A political economy pattern explains the results:
Together these forces create a policy trap: extreme-weather events tend to delay enabling reforms; weaker legal protections reduce women’s resilience, participation, and agency; and lower agency heightens vulnerability to the next shock.
Climate events don’t automatically set back women’s rights. But without deliberate design and financing, temperature anomalies can divert policy away from reforms vital to women’s economic empowerment, especially in low-income countries. The paper offers a way forward: center women’s legal rights in climate-resilience plans and protect them with disaster-response tools—fiscal buffers, contingency finance, and institutional safeguards. Doing so preserves hard-won gains and strengthens inclusive, shock-resilient growth.
Source : World Bank
Digital design increasingly confers a competitive edge in global tech markets. This column examines how…
The novelty and speed of diffusion of generative AI means that evidence on its impact…
Much of the debate over the consequences of immigration restrictions for labour market outcomes of…
Macroeconomic models distinguish time-dependent pricing, where firms change prices at fixed intervals, from state-dependent pricing,…
Attending the World Economic Forum in Davos is costly, with estimates ranging between $20,000 and…
In many developing countries, productive firms remain too small, while less productive firms are too…