2021
DOI: 10.1086/703082
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He Says, She Says: Spousal Disagreement in Survey Measures of Bargaining Power

Abstract: Measures of control over assets and participation in household decisions are often used as indicators of bargaining power. Yet, spouses do not necessarily provide the same responses to questions about these topics. Using household survey data from Bangladesh, we examine differences in spouses' answers to questions regarding women's involvement as asset owners and decision makers and develop a model to understand what these differences tell us about household behavior. Disagreement is substantial and systematic… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…numerous to effectively analyze, we collapse responses into a smaller number of categories. We are particularly interested in whether there is concordance in responses about the wife's roles and thus we follow Ambler et al (2021) and analyze the following categories: (1) neither spouse says the wife owns or decides; (2) both spouses say the wife owns or decides; (3) the wife says she owns or decides, but the husband reports that she does not; and (4) the husband says the wife owns or decides, but she reports that she does not. The first two categories represent measures of concordance, and the latter two represent discordance.…”
Section: Since the Combinations Of All Possible Responses Of Husbandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…numerous to effectively analyze, we collapse responses into a smaller number of categories. We are particularly interested in whether there is concordance in responses about the wife's roles and thus we follow Ambler et al (2021) and analyze the following categories: (1) neither spouse says the wife owns or decides; (2) both spouses say the wife owns or decides; (3) the wife says she owns or decides, but the husband reports that she does not; and (4) the husband says the wife owns or decides, but she reports that she does not. The first two categories represent measures of concordance, and the latter two represent discordance.…”
Section: Since the Combinations Of All Possible Responses Of Husbandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Asking the same set of questions to multiple household members generates a wealth of information, but it also creates the challenge of determining how to analyze multiple-and sometimes contradictory-answers to the same question. Frequently, studies find that husbands and wives provide different answers when asked the same survey questions, particularly on questions about consumption decisions and about women's autonomy (Allendorf, 2007a;Ambler et al, 2021;Anderson, Reynolds, and Gugerty, 2016;Deere & Twyman, 2012;Becker, Fonseca-Becker, & Schenck-Yglesias, 2006;Ghuman, Lee, & Smith, 2006;Jejeebhoy, 2002). While many studies in Asia reveal that husbands report higher levels of wives' involvement in decision making compared to wives' reports (Ghuman, Lee, & Smith, 2006;Jejeebhoy, 2002), both Allendorf (2007a) for Nepal and Ambler, Doss, Kieran, & Passarelli (2021) for Bangladesh find that wives generally report that they have a larger role in decision making than their husbands acknowledge.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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