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“gender budgeting is good budgeting”[1]

Gender budgeting provisions money to promoting gender equality. Money allocated to promoting gender equality and supporting developing research, has demonstrated to foster gender equality. Being able to research and study the effects of gender budgeting, researcher can then revise and improve gender budgeting to enhance who and how it is expended.

The exclusion of women from early economic development has placed men as controller of capitalism. Women were pushed aside by promoting masculinity men as the bread winner and simultaneously emphasizing in ‘cult of domesticity’ (Kessler-Harris 1982, pp. 49-50) for women [2], which encapsulated women to the home obligations. Capitalism has then been supported by discriminative patriarchal systems that have worked to maintain economic and social hierarchies. [4] Leaders of capitalism are imparted with “newly emerging source of wealth, power and prestige” (Brandt 1995, p. 35) [2]. Exhibiting these ideas has legitimize them as controllers of capitalism and therefore favoring patriarchy.

Capitalism has then been cultivated on the exploitation of women. Women are being “economic subordination” to favor patriarchy. (Hartmann 1979, p. 11). [2]Retaining women from economic development and channeling them into less skilled and laborious work sectors of domestic and caring, has promoted to the success of capitalism.

1.	Stotsky, Janet. “Gender Budgeting: Fiscal Context and Current Outcomes.” IMF Working Papers, vol. 16, no. 149, 2016, p. 1-50 2.	Brown, Doug. "Capitalism." The Elgar Companion to Feminist Economics, edited by Janice Peterson, and Margaret Lewis, Edward Elgar Publishing, 1st edition, 2004. Credo Reference, http://libproxy.sdsu.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/elgarfe/capitalism/0?institutionId=1591. Accessed 01 Dec. 2018. 3.	“Gender Budgeting.” EIGE, Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union, 22 Sept. 2017, eige.europa.eu/gender-mainstreaming/methods-tools/gender-budgeting#7. 4.	Maria S. Flores. “Integrating Gender in Economic Analysis.” Evans, Mary, et al. The SAGE Handbook of Feminist Theory. SAGE Publications Ltd, 2014. EBSCOhost, libproxy.sdsu.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=801611&site=ehost-live&scope=site. 5.	Elizabeth Klazer and Christina Schlager. “Feminist Perspectives on Microeconomics: Reconfiguration of Power Structures and Erosions of Gender Equality through the New Economic Governance Regime in the European Unions.” Evans, Mary, et al. The SAGE Handbook of Feminist Theory. SAGE Publications Ltd, 2014. EBSCOhost,libproxy.sdsu.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=801611&site=ehost-live&scope=site.