Gender Equity Index (GEI) 2007
Table of contents
- Social Watch Gender Equity Index
- GEI values in 2007
- Recent GEI trends (2004-2007)
- GEI average values by region
- GEI average values in relation to country income levels
- GEI dimension values: the 10 most equitable countries
- GEI dimension values: the 10 least equitable countries
- GEI percentage variation by geographical region (2004-2007)
- GEI percentage variation by income group (2004-2007)
- The 10 countries with the greatest GEI regression
- The 10 countries with the greatest GEI progress
- DOWNLOAD GEI2007 DOC
- Key measures and areas of action
- RWANDA
- Gender Equity Index - Progress and Regression
- Countries with the best GEI performance, 2007
- Countries with the worst GEI performance, 2007
- Gender Equity Index (GEI) 2007 - FLASH VERSION
The results of the 2007 Social Watch Gender Equity Index (GEI) clearly demonstrate that a country’s level of wealth does not automatically determine its degree of equity. Rwanda, one of the world’s least developed countries, ranks third on the list of GEI scores, after Sweden and Finland, thanks to intensive affirmative action efforts. In the meantime, a number of high-income countries rank far down on the list. The evolution of the GEI between 2004 and 2007 reveals a few global advances, but the general trend seen throughout the world is either very slow progress or no progress at all. The United States, a high-income country, is one of the 10 countries that have experienced the greatest regression. Obviously, the key to gender equity lies not in a country’s economic power, but rather in its government’s political will.
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