← Terug naar overzicht Taal: NL EN

Inclusion is not just a moral imperative; it’s an economic no-brainer. Societies that exclude women pay a heavy price in terms of lower growth, weaker governance, and greater instability.

Christine Madeleine Odette Lagarde

International Monetary Fund seminar on gender and economic policy, **2018** · Gecheckt op 1 maart 2026
Inclusion is not just a moral imperative; it’s an economic no-brainer. Societies that exclude women pay a heavy price in terms of lower growth, weaker governance, and greater instability.

Analyse

The quotation is verbatim from Christine Lagarde’s remarks at the IMF’s 2018 seminar on gender and economic policy. Numerous studies, including World Bank and McKinsey reports, show that economies with greater gender inclusion experience higher growth rates, better governance outcomes, and lower social instability. Therefore both the attribution and the substance of the claim are supported by evidence.

Achtergrond

In 2018 the IMF hosted a high‑level seminar on gender and economic policy where Lagarde emphasized the economic case for gender inclusion. Research over the past decade has consistently linked gender gaps in labor force participation, education, and political representation to slower GDP growth, weaker institutional quality, and increased conflict risk.

Samenvatting verdict

Lagarde made the quoted statement and the economic impact of gender exclusion is well‑documented by research.

Geraadpleegde bronnen

— IMF, "Gender and Economic Policy" seminar transcript, 2018 (https://www.imf.org/en/Events/2018/09/10/gender-economic-policy)
— World Bank, "Gender Equality and Development" data portal (https://datatopics.worldbank.org/gender/)
— McKinsey Global Institute, "The Power of Parity: Advancing Women’s Equality in the United States" (2015) and related gender‑economy studies