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Gender Equality and Fiscal Policy-Making: Gender Mainstreaming in the EU Pandemic Recovery

European Politics
European Union
Gender
Policy-Making
Matilde Ceron
Universität Salzburg
Matilde Ceron
Universität Salzburg

Abstract

While the EU has a longstanding formal commitment to gender mainstreaming, gender equality has traditionally remained a blind spot of EU economic governance and crisis responses. The paper investigates if and under which conditions the EU response to the pandemic can promote gender-sensitive recovery policies. Next Generation EU entails common funding and priorities, including gender mainstreaming. Yet, the plans are designed at the national level. While the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRies) represents unprecedented progress in including a gender mainstreaming mandate, its efficacy in delivering gender-sensitive recovery plans appears limited and heterogeneous across country. The analysis assesses whether and under which conditions the gender mainstreaming mandate of the RRF is effective. In doing so it considers how gender conditionality works, how it was enforced and the extent of its saliency and scope in the RRF and NRRPs multi-level policymaking process. Document analysis and elite interviews indicate conditionality through the gender mainstreaming mandate is weak, especially against others such as spending allocation targets and CSRs implementation. Moreover, its scope was predominantly narrowly related to its growth-enhancing potential. The analysis provides a gendered assessment of the flagship EU response to the pandemic and more broadly questions the effectiveness of (weak) gender mainstreaming conditionality, a cornerstone of the EU gender equality strategy.