[Congressional Bills 115th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 3247 Reported in Senate (RS)]

<DOC>





                                                       Calendar No. 683
115th CONGRESS
  2d Session
                                S. 3247

To improve programs and activities relating to women's entrepreneurship 
  and economic empowerment that are carried out by the United States 
     Agency for International Development, and for other purposes.


_______________________________________________________________________


                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                             July 19, 2018

  Mr. Boozman (for himself, Mr. Cardin, Mrs. Shaheen, Mr. Rubio, Ms. 
   Murkowski, Mr. Coons, Mr. Isakson, Mr. Merkley, Ms. Collins, Mr. 
 Graham, and Mr. Durbin) introduced the following bill; which was read 
        twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations

                           November 28, 2018

               Reported by Mr. Corker, with an amendment
 [Strike out all after the enacting clause and insert the part printed 
                               in italic]

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
To improve programs and activities relating to women's entrepreneurship 
  and economic empowerment that are carried out by the United States 
     Agency for International Development, and for other purposes.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

<DELETED>SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    This Act may be cited as the ``Women's Entrepreneurship 
and Economic Empowerment Act of 2018''.</DELETED>

<DELETED>SEC. 2. FINDINGS.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    Congress finds the following:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) Because women make up the majority of the 
        world's poor and gender inequalities prevail in incomes, wages, 
        access to finance, ownership of assets, and control over the 
        allocation of resources, women's entrepreneurship and economic 
        empowerment is important to achieve inclusive economic growth 
        at all levels of society. Research shows that when women exert 
        greater influence over household finances, economic outcomes 
        for families improve, and childhood survival rates, food 
        security, and educational attainment increase. Women also tend 
        to place a greater emphasis on household savings which improves 
        families' financial resiliency.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) A 2016 report by the McKinsey Global Institute 
        estimated that achieving global gender parity in economic 
        activity could add as much as $28,000,000,000,000 to annual 
        global gross domestic product (GDP) by 2025.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) Lack of access to financial services that 
        address gender-specific constraints impedes women's economic 
        inclusion. More than 1,000,000,000 women around the world are 
        currently left out of the formal financial system, which in 
        turn causes many women to rely on informal means of saving and 
        borrowing that are riskier and less reliable. Among other 
        consequences, this hampers the success of women entrepreneurs, 
        including those seeking to run or grow small and medium-sized 
        enterprises (SMEs). The International Finance Corporation has 
        estimated that 70 percent of women-owned SMEs in the formal 
        sector are unserved or underserved in terms of access to 
        credit, amounting to a $285,000,000,000 credit gap.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) Women's economic empowerment is inextricably 
        linked to a myriad of other women's human rights that are 
        essential to their ability to thrive as economic actors across 
        the lifecycle. This includes living lives free of violence and 
        exploitation, achieving the highest possible standard of health 
        and well-being, enjoying full legal and human rights such as 
        access to registration, identification, and citizenship 
        documents, benefitting from formal and informal education, and 
        equal protection of and access to land and property rights, 
        access to fundamental labor rights, policies to address 
        disproportionate care burdens, and business and management 
        skills and leadership opportunities.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (5) Discriminatory legal and regulatory systems 
        and banking practices are hurdles to women's access to capital 
        and assets, including land, machinery, production facilities, 
        technology, and human resources. Often, these barriers are 
        connected to a woman's marital status, which can determine 
        whether she is able to inherit land or own property in her 
        name. These constraints contribute to women frequently running 
        smaller businesses, with fewer employees and lower asset 
        values.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (6) Savings groups primarily comprised of women 
        are recognized as a vital entry point, especially for poor and 
        very poor women, to formal financial services and there is a 
        high demand for such groups to protect and grow their savings 
        with formal financial institutions. Evidence shows that, once 
        linked to a bank, the average savings per member increases 
        between 40 to 100 percent and the average profit per member 
        doubles. Key to these outcomes is investing in financial 
        literacy, business leadership training, and 
        mentorship.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (7) United States support for microenterprise and 
        microfinance development programs, which seek to reduce poverty 
        in low-income countries by giving small loans to small-scale 
        entrepreneurs without collateral, have been a useful mechanism 
        to help families weather economic shocks, but many microcredit 
        borrowers largely remain in poverty. The vast majority of 
        microcredit borrowers are women who would like to move up the 
        economic ladder but are held back by binding constraints that 
        create a ``missing middle''--large numbers of microenterprises, 
        a handful of large firms or conglomerates, and very few SMEs in 
        between, which are critical to driving economic growth in 
        developing countries.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (8) According to the World Bank, SMEs create four 
        out of 5 new positions in emerging markets but about half of 
        formal SMEs don't have access to formal credit. The financing 
        gap is even larger when micro and informal enterprises are 
        taken into account. Overall, approximately 70 percent of all 
        micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) in emerging 
        markets lack access to credit.</DELETED>

<DELETED>SEC. 3. ACTIONS TO IMPROVE GENDER POLICIES OF THE UNITED 
              STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    (a) Development Cooperation Policy.--It shall be the 
development cooperation policy of the United States--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) to reduce gender disparities in access to, 
        control over, and benefit from economic, social, political, and 
        cultural resources, wealth, opportunities, and 
        services;</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) to strive to eliminate gender-based violence 
        and mitigate its harmful effects on individuals and communities 
        through efforts to develop standards and capacity to reduce 
        gender-based violence in the workplace and other places where 
        women conduct work;</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) to support activities that secure private 
        property rights and land tenure for women in developing 
        countries, including legal frameworks to give women equal 
        rights to own, register, use, profit from, and inherit land and 
        property, legal literacy to exercise these rights, and capacity 
        of law enforcement and community leaders to enforce such 
        rights; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) to increase the capability of women and girls 
        to realize their rights, determine their life outcomes, assume 
        leadership roles, and influence decisionmaking in households, 
        communities, and societies.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (b) Actions.--In order to advance the policy described in 
subsection (a), the Administrator of the United States Agency for 
International Development shall ensure that--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) strategies, projects, and activities of the 
        Agency are shaped by a gender analysis and, when applicable, 
        use standard indicators to provide one measure of success of 
        such strategies, projects, and activities; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) gender equality and female empowerment is 
        integrated throughout the Agency's Program Cycle and related 
        processes for purposes of strategic planning, project design 
        and implementation, and monitoring and evaluation.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (c) Gender Analysis Defined.--In this section, the term 
``gender analysis''--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) means a socioeconomic analysis of available or 
        gathered quantitative and qualitative information to identify, 
        understand, and explain gaps between men and women which 
        typically involves examining--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) differences in the status of women and 
                men and their differential access to and control over 
                assets, resources, opportunities, and 
                services;</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) the influence of gender roles, 
                structural barriers, and norms on the division of time 
                between paid employment, unpaid work (including 
                subsistence production and care for family members), 
                and volunteer activities;</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (C) the influence of gender roles, 
                structural barriers, and norms on leadership roles and 
                decisionmaking; constraints, opportunities, and entry 
                points for narrowing gender gaps and empowering women; 
                and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (D) potential differential impacts of 
                development policies and programs on men and women, 
                including unintended or negative consequences; 
                and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) includes conclusions and recommendations to 
        enable development policies and programs to narrow gender gaps 
        and improve the lives of women and girls.</DELETED>

<DELETED>SEC. 4. DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE FOR MICRO, SMALL AND MEDIUM-
              SIZED ENTERPRISES.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    (a) Findings and Policy.--Section 251 of the Foreign 
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211) is amended--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in paragraph (1)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) by striking ``microenterprise'' and 
                inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized 
                enterprises'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) by striking ``and in the development'' 
                and inserting ``, in the development''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (C) by inserting ``, and in the economic 
                empowerment of the poor, especially women'' before the 
                period at the end;</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in paragraph (2)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) by striking ``microenterprise'' and 
                inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized 
                enterprises''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) by inserting ``, particularly 
                enterprises owned, managed, and controlled by women'' 
                before the period at the end;</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) in paragraph (3), by striking 
        ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and medium-
        sized enterprises'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) in paragraph (4), by striking 
        ``microenterprise'' and inserting ``micro, small, and medium-
        sized enterprise'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (5) in paragraph (5)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) by striking ``should continue'' and 
                inserting ``should continue and be expanded''; 
                and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) by striking ``microenterprise and 
                microfinance development assistance'' and inserting 
                ``development assistance for micro, small, and medium-
                sized enterprises''; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (6) in paragraph (6)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) by striking ``have been successful'' 
                and inserting ``have had some success'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) by striking ``microenterprise 
                programs'' and inserting ``development assistance for 
                micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; 
                and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (C) by striking ``, such as countries in 
                Latin America''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (b) Authorization; Implementation; Targeted Assistance.--
Section 252 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211a) is 
amended--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in subsection (a)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), 
                by striking ``credit, savings, and other services to 
                microfinance and microenterprise clients'' and 
                inserting ``credit, including the use of innovative 
                credit scoring models, savings, financial technology, 
                financial literacy, insurance, property rights, and 
                other services to micro, small, and medium-sized 
                enterprise clients'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in paragraph (1), by striking 
                ``microfinance and microenterprise clients'' and 
                inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise 
                clients, particularly clients owned, managed, and 
                controlled by women'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (C) in paragraph (2)--</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (i) by striking 
                        ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, 
                        small, and medium-sized enterprises''; 
                        and</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (ii) by inserting ``to acquire 
                        United States goods and services,'' after 
                        ``United States markets,'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (D) in paragraph (3)--</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (i) by striking ``microfinance and 
                        microenterprise institutions'' and inserting 
                        ``financial intermediaries'';</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (ii) by striking ``microfinance 
                        and microenterprise clients'' and inserting 
                        ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; 
                        and</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (iii) by striking ``and'' at the 
                        end;</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (E) in paragraph (4)--</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (i) by striking ``microfinance and 
                        microenterprise clients and institutions'' and 
                        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized 
                        enterprises, financial intermediaries, and 
                        capital markets''; and</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (ii) by striking ``the poor and 
                        very poor.'' and inserting ``the poor and very 
                        poor, especially women;''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (F) by adding at the end the 
                following:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(5) assistance for the purpose of promoting the 
        economic empowerment of women, including through increased 
        access to financial resources and improving property rights, 
        inheritance rights, and other legal protections; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(6) assistance for the purpose of scaling up 
        evidence-based graduation approaches, which include targeting 
        the very poor and households in ultra-poverty, consumption 
        support, promotion of savings, skills training, and asset 
        transfers.'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in subsection (b)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) by amending paragraph (1) to read as 
                follows:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(1) In general.--There is authorized to be 
        established within the Agency an office to support the Agency's 
        efforts to broaden and deepen local financial markets, expand 
        access to appropriate financial products and services, and 
        support the development of micro, small and medium-sized 
        enterprises. The Office shall be headed by a Director who shall 
        possess technical expertise and ability to offer leadership in 
        the field of financial sector development.'';</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in paragraph (2)--</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (i) by amending subparagraph (B) 
                        to read as follows:</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(B) Use of central funding mechanisms.--
                In order to ensure that assistance under this title is 
                distributed effectively and efficiently, the office 
                shall provide coordination and support for field-
                implemented programs, including through targeted core 
                support for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises 
                and local financial markets.''; and</DELETED>
                        <DELETED>    (ii) in subparagraph (C), in the 
                        matter preceding clause (i)--</DELETED>
                                <DELETED>    (I) by inserting ``, 
                                particularly by protecting the use and 
                                funding of local organizations in 
                                countries in which the Agency 
                                invests,'' after ``and 
                                sustainability''; and</DELETED>
                                <DELETED>    (II) by inserting ``, 
                                especially women'' after ``the poor and 
                                very poor''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (C) by striking paragraph (3); 
                and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) in subsection (c), by striking ``subsection 
        (a), 50 percent of all microenterprise resources'' and all that 
        follows and inserting the following: ``subsection (a)--
        </DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(1) 50 percent of all micro, small, and medium-
        sized enterprise resources shall be targeted to activities that 
        reach the very poor; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(2) 50 percent of all small and medium-sized 
        enterprise resources shall be targeted to activities that reach 
        enterprises owned, managed, and controlled by 
        women.''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (c) Monitoring System.--Section 253(b) of the Foreign 
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211b(b)) is amended--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, including 
        goals on a gender disaggregated basis, such as improvements in 
        employment, access to financial services, enterprise 
        development, earnings and control over income, and property and 
        land rights,'' after ``performance goals'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``include 
        performance indicators to be used in measuring or assessing the 
        achievement'' and inserting ``incorporate Agency planning and 
        reporting processes and indicators to measure or assess the 
        achievement''; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) by striking paragraph (4).</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (d) Poverty Measurement Methods.--Section 254 of the 
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211c) is amended to read as 
follows:</DELETED>

<DELETED>``SEC. 254. POVERTY MEASUREMENT METHODS.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    ``The Administrator of the Agency, in consultation with 
financial intermediaries and other appropriate organizations, should 
have in place at least one method for implementing partners to use to 
assess poverty levels of their current incoming or prospective 
clients.''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (e) Additional Authorities.--Section 255 of the Foreign 
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211d) is amended--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) by striking ``assistance for microenterprise 
        development assistance'' and inserting ``development assistance 
        for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) by striking ``and, to the extent applicable'' 
        and all that follows and inserting a period.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (f) Microenterprise Development Credits.--Section 256 of 
the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2212) is amended--
</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in the section heading, by striking 
        ``microenterprise development credits'' and inserting 
        ``development credits for micro, small, and medium-sized 
        enterprises'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in subsection (a)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``micro- 
                and small enterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, 
                and medium-sized enterprises''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) in subsection (b)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), 
                by striking ``microenterprise households lacking full 
                access to credit'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises and households lacking full 
                access to credit and other financial services''; 
                and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in paragraphs (1) and (2), by striking 
                ``microfinance institutions'' each place such term 
                appears and inserting ``financial 
                intermediaries'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) in subsection (c), in the matter preceding 
        paragraph (1), by striking ``microfinance institutions'' and 
        inserting ``financial intermediaries''; and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (5) in subsections (c) and (d), by striking 
        ``microenterprise households'' each place such term appears and 
        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises and 
        households''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (g) United States Microfinance Loan Facility.--Section 257 
of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2213) is amended--
</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``United 
        States-supported microfinance institutions'' and inserting 
        ``United States-supported financial intermediaries''; 
        and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in subsection (b)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``United 
                States-supported microfinance institutions'' each place 
                such term appears and inserting ``United States-
                supported financial intermediaries''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                ``microfinance institutions'' and inserting ``financial 
                intermediaries''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (h) Contents of Report.--Section 258(b) of the Foreign 
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2214(b)) is amended to read as 
follows:</DELETED>
<DELETED>    ``(b) Contents.--To the extent practicable, the report 
submitted under subsection (a) should contain the following:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(1) Information about assistance provided under 
        section 252, including--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(A) the amount of each grant or other 
                form of assistance;</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(B) the name and type of each 
                intermediary and implementing partner organization 
                receiving assistance;</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(C) the name of each country receiving 
                assistance; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(D) the methodology used to ensure 
                compliance with the targeted assistance requirements 
                under subsection (c) of such section.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(2) The percentage of assistance provided under 
        section 252, disaggregated by income level, including for the 
        very poor, and by gender.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(3) The estimated number of individuals that 
        received assistance under section 252, disaggregated by income 
        level, including for the very poor, by gender, and by type of 
        assistance, including loans, training, and business development 
        services.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(4) The results of the monitoring system 
        required under section 253.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(5) Information about any method in place to 
        assess poverty levels under section 254.''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (i) Definitions.--Section 259 of the Foreign Assistance 
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2214a) is amended--</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Committee on 
        International Relations of the House of Representatives'' and 
        inserting ``Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) in paragraph (4), by striking 
        ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and medium-
        sized enterprises'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) in paragraph (6)--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in subparagraph (E), by striking 
                ``microenterprise institution'' and inserting ``micro, 
                small, or medium-sized enterprise institution''; 
                and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) in subparagraph (F), by striking 
                ``microfinance institution'' and inserting ``financial 
                intermediary'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) by striking paragraphs (7) and (8) and 
        inserting the following:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(7) Micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise 
        institution.--The term `micro, small, and medium-sized 
        enterprise institution' means an entity that provides services, 
        including finance, training, or business development services, 
        for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises in foreign 
        countries.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(8) Financial intermediary.--The term `financial 
        intermediary' means the entity that acts as the intermediary 
        between parties in a financial transaction, such as a bank, 
        credit union, investment fund, a village savings and loan 
        group, or an institution that provides financial services to a 
        micro, small, or medium-sized enterprise.'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (5) by striking paragraph (9);</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (6) by redesignating paragraphs (10) through (14) 
        as paragraphs (9) through (13), respectively;</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (7) in paragraph (9), as redesignated, by striking 
        ``of microenterprise development'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (8) by amending paragraph (10), as redesignated, 
        to read as follows:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    ``(10) Practitioner institution.--The term 
        `practitioner institution' means a not-for-profit entity, a 
        financial intermediary, an information and communications 
        technology firm with a mobile money platform, a village and 
        savings loan group, or any other entity that provides financial 
        or business development services authorized under section 252 
        that benefits micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise 
        clients.'';</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (9) in paragraph (12), as redesignated--</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (A) in the paragraph heading, by striking 
                ``United states-supported microfinance institution'' 
                and inserting ``United states-supported financial 
                intermediary''; and</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    (B) by striking ``United States-supported 
                microfinance institution'' and inserting ``United 
                States-supported financial intermediary''; 
                and</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (10) in paragraph (13), as redesignated, by 
        amending subparagraph (B) to read as follows:</DELETED>
                <DELETED>    ``(B) living below the international 
                poverty line (as defined by the International Bank for 
                Reconstruction and Development and the International 
                Development Association (collectively referred to as 
                the `World Bank')).''.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (j) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--Title VI of 
chapter 2 of part I of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 
2211 et seq.) is amended in the title heading by striking 
``MICROENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE'' and inserting ``DEVELOPMENT 
ASSISTANCE FOR MICRO, SMALL, AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES''.</DELETED>

<DELETED>SEC. 5. REPORT AND BRIEFING BY UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR 
              INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    (a) In General.--Not later than 1 year after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator of the United States 
Agency for International Development shall provide a briefing and 
submit a report to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of 
the Senate on the implementation of this Act and the amendments made by 
this Act, including actions to improve the gender policies of the 
United States Agency for International Development pursuant to section 
3.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (b) Public Availability.--The report required under 
subsection (a) shall be posted and made available on a text-based, 
searchable, and publicly available internet website.</DELETED>

<DELETED>SEC. 6. REPORT BY COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED 
              STATES.</DELETED>

<DELETED>    (a) In General.--Not later than 2 years after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the United States 
shall submit a report to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House 
of Representatives and the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of 
the Senate on development assistance for micro, small, and medium-sized 
enterprises administered by the United States Agency for International 
Development.</DELETED>
<DELETED>    (b) Matters To Be Included.--The report required under 
subsection (a) shall include an assessment of the following:</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (1) What is known about the impact of such 
        development assistance on the economies of developing 
        countries.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (2) The extent to which such development 
        assistance is targeting women and the very poor, including what 
        is known about how such development assistance benefits 
        women.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (3) The extent to which the United States Agency 
        for International Development has developed a methodology to 
        ensure compliance with the targeted assistance requirement 
        under section 252(c) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as 
        amended by section 4, and the quality of such 
        methodology.</DELETED>
        <DELETED>    (4) The monitoring system required under section 
        253(b) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended by 
        section 4, including the quality of such monitoring 
        system.</DELETED>

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

    This Act may be cited as the ``Women's Entrepreneurship and 
Economic Empowerment Act of 2018''.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) Because women make up the majority of the world's poor 
        and gender inequalities prevail in incomes, wages, access to 
        finance, ownership of assets, and control over the allocation 
        of resources, women's entrepreneurship and economic empowerment 
        is important to achieve inclusive economic growth at all levels 
        of society.
            (2) Research shows that when women exert greater influence 
        over household finances, economic outcomes for families 
        improve, and childhood survival rates, food security, and 
        educational attainment increase. Women also tend to place a 
        greater emphasis on household savings which improves family 
        financial resiliency.
            (3) A 2016 report by the McKinsey Global Institute 
        estimated that achieving global gender parity in economic 
        activity could add as much as $28,000,000,000,000 to annual 
        global gross domestic product by 2025.
            (4) Lack of access to financial services that address 
        gender-specific constraints impedes women's economic inclusion. 
        Roughly 1,000,000,000 women around the world are currently left 
        out of the formal financial system, which causes many women to 
        rely on informal means of saving and borrowing that are riskier 
        and less reliable.
            (5) Among other consequences, this lack of access hampers 
        the success of women entrepreneurs, including women who are 
        seeking to run or grow small and medium-sized enterprises. The 
        International Finance Corporation has estimated that 70 percent 
        of women-owned small and medium-sized enterprises in the formal 
        sector are unserved or underserved in terms of access to 
        financial services, resulting in a financing gap of 
        $300,000,000,000 for women-owned small businesses.
            (6) Women's economic empowerment is inextricably linked to 
        a myriad of other women's human rights that are essential to 
        their ability to thrive as economic actors across the 
        lifecycle, including--
                    (A) living lives free of violence and exploitation;
                    (B) achieving the highest possible standard of 
                health and well-being;
                    (C) enjoying full legal and human rights, such as 
                access to registration, identification, and citizenship 
                documents;
                    (D) benefitting from formal and informal education;
                    (E) equal protection of and access to land and 
                property rights;
                    (F) access to fundamental labor rights;
                    (G) policies to address disproportionate care 
                burdens; and
                    (H) business and management skills and leadership 
                opportunities.
            (7) Discriminatory legal and regulatory systems and banking 
        practices are obstacles to women's access to capital and 
        assets, including land, machinery, production facilities, 
        technology, and human resources. These barriers are often 
        connected to a woman's marital status, which can determine 
        whether she is able to inherit land or own property in her 
        name. These constraints contribute to women frequently running 
        smaller businesses, with fewer employees and lower asset 
        values.
            (8) Savings groups primarily comprised of women are 
        recognized as a vital entry point, especially for poor and very 
        poor women, to formal financial services. There is a high 
        demand for such groups to protect and grow the savings of women 
        with formal financial institutions.
            (9) Evidence shows that, once a saving group is linked to a 
        bank, the average savings per member increases between 40 to 
        100 percent and the average profit per member doubles. 
        Investing in financial literacy, business leadership training, 
        and mentorship are key elements to these outcomes.
            (10) United States support for microenterprise and 
        microfinance development programs, which seek to reduce poverty 
        in low-income countries by giving small loans to small-scale 
        entrepreneurs without collateral, have been a useful mechanism 
        to help families weather economic shocks, but many microcredit 
        borrowers largely remain in poverty.
            (11) The vast majority of microcredit borrowers are women 
        who would like to move up the economic ladder, but are held 
        back by binding constraints that create a missing middle - 
        large numbers of microenterprises, a handful of large firms or 
        conglomerates, and very few small and medium-sized enterprises 
        in between, which are critical to driving economic growth in 
        developing countries.
            (12) According to the World Bank, small and medium-sized 
        enterprises create 4 out of 5 new positions in emerging 
        markets, but approximately 50 percent of formal small and 
        medium-sized enterprises lack access to formal credit. The 
        financing gap is even larger when micro and informal 
        enterprises are taken into account. Overall, approximately 70 
        percent of all micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises in 
        emerging markets lack access to credit.

SEC. 3. ACTIONS TO IMPROVE THE INTERNATIONAL GENDER POLICY OF THE 
              UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Gender Analysis Defined.--In this section, the term ``gender 
analysis''--
            (1) means a socioeconomic analysis of available or gathered 
        quantitative and qualitative information to identify, 
        understand, and explain gaps between men and women which 
        typically involves examining--
                    (A) differences in the status of women and men and 
                their differential access to and control over assets, 
                resources, education, opportunities, and services;
                    (B) the influence of gender roles, structural 
                barriers, and norms on the division of time between 
                paid employment, unpaid work (including the subsistence 
                production and care for family members), and volunteer 
                activities;
                    (C) the influence of gender roles, structural 
                barriers, and norms on leadership roles and decision 
                making; constraints, opportunities, and entry points 
                for narrowing gender gaps and empowering women; and
                    (D) potential differential impacts of development 
                policies and programs on men and women, including 
                unintended or negative consequences; and
            (2) includes conclusions and recommendations to enable 
        development policies and programs to narrow gender gaps and 
        improve the lives of women and girls.
    (b) International Development Cooperation Policy.--It shall be the 
international development cooperation policy of the United States--
            (1) to reduce gender disparities with respect to economic, 
        social, political, educational, and cultural resources, wealth, 
        opportunities, and services;
            (2) to strive to eliminate gender-based violence and 
        mitigate its harmful effects on individuals and communities 
        including through efforts to develop standards and capacity to 
        reduce gender-based violence in the workplace and other places 
        where women work;
            (3) to support activities that secure private property 
        rights and land tenure for women in developing countries, 
        including--
                    (A) legal frameworks that give women equal rights 
                to own, register, use, profit from, and inherit land 
                and property;
                    (B) improving legal literacy to enable women to 
                exercise the rights described in subparagraph (A); and
                    (C) improving the capacity of law enforcement and 
                community leaders to enforce such rights;
            (4) to increase the capability of women and girls to fully 
        exercise their rights, determine their life outcomes, assume 
        leadership roles, and influence decision-making in households, 
        communities, and societies; and
            (5) to improve the access of women and girls to education, 
        particularly higher education opportunities in business, 
        finance, and management, in order to enhance financial literacy 
        and business development, management, and strategy skills.
    (c) Actions.--In order to advance the policy described in 
subsection (b), the Administrator of the United States Agency for 
International Development shall ensure that--
            (1) strategies, projects, and activities of the Agency are 
        shaped by a gender analysis;
            (2) standard indicators are used to assess such strategies, 
        projects, and activities, if applicable; and
            (3) gender equality and female empowerment are integrated 
        throughout the Agency's program cycle and related processes for 
        purposes of strategic planning, project design and 
        implementation, monitoring, and evaluation.

SEC. 4. DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE FOR MICRO, SMALL, AND MEDIUM-SIZED 
              ENTERPRISES.

    (a) Findings and Policy.--Section 251 of the Foreign Assistance Act 
of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``microenterprise'' and inserting 
                ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises'';
                    (B) by striking ``and in the development'' and 
                inserting ``, in the development''; and
                    (C) by inserting ``, and in the economic 
                empowerment of the poor, especially women'' before the 
                period at the end;
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``microenterprise'' and inserting 
                ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; and
                    (B) by inserting ``, particularly enterprises 
                owned, managed, and controlled by women'' before the 
                period at the end;
            (3) in paragraph (3), by striking ``microenterprises'' and 
        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises'';
            (4) in paragraph (4), by striking ``microenterprise'' and 
        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise'';
            (5) in paragraph (5)--
                    (A) by striking ``should continue'' and inserting 
                ``should continue and be expanded''; and
                    (B) by striking ``microenterprise and microfinance 
                development assistance'' and inserting ``development 
                assistance for micro, small, and medium-sized 
                enterprises''; and
            (6) in paragraph (6)--
                    (A) by striking ``have been successful'' and 
                inserting ``have had some success'';
                    (B) by striking ``microenterprise programs should'' 
                and inserting ``development assistance for micro, 
                small, and medium-sized enterprises should''; and
                    (C) by striking ``, such as countries in Latin 
                America''.
    (b) Authorization; Implementation; Targeted Assistance.--Section 
252 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211a) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``credit, savings, and other services to 
                microfinance and microenterprise clients'' and 
                inserting ``credit, including the use of innovative 
                credit scoring models, savings, financial technology, 
                financial literacy, education, insurance, property 
                rights, and other services to micro, small, and medium-
                sized enterprise clients'';
                    (B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``microfinance 
                and microenterprise clients'' and inserting ``micro, 
                small, and medium-sized enterprise clients, 
                particularly clients owned, managed, and controlled by 
                women'';
                    (C) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises'';
                    (D) in paragraph (3)--
                            (i) by striking ``microfinance and 
                        microenterprise institutions'' and inserting 
                        ``financial intermediaries'';
                            (ii) by striking ``microfinance and 
                        microenterprise clients'' and inserting 
                        ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; 
                        and
                            (iii) by striking ``and'' at the end;
                    (E) in paragraph (4)--
                            (i) by striking ``microfinance and 
                        microenterprise clients and institutions'' and 
                        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized 
                        enterprises, financial intermediaries, and 
                        capital markets''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``the poor and very 
                        poor.'' and inserting ``the poor and very poor, 
                        especially women;''; and
                    (F) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) assistance for the purpose of promoting the economic 
        empowerment of women, including through increased access to 
        financial resources and improving property rights, inheritance 
        rights, and other legal protections; and
            ``(6) assistance for the purpose of scaling up evidence-
        based graduation approaches, which include targeting the very 
        poor and households in ultra-poverty, consumption support, 
        promotion of savings, financial literacy, skills training, and 
        asset transfers.'';
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by amending paragraph (1) to read as follows:
            ``(1) In general.--There is authorized to be established 
        within the Agency an office to support the Agency's efforts to 
        broaden and deepen local financial markets, expand access to 
        appropriate financial products and services, and support the 
        development of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. The 
        Office shall be headed by a Director who shall possess 
        technical expertise and ability to offer leadership in the 
        field of financial sector development.'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) by amending subparagraph (B) to read as 
                        follows:
                    ``(B) Use of central funding mechanisms.--In order 
                to ensure that assistance under this title is 
                distributed effectively and efficiently, the office 
                shall provide coordination and support for field-
                implemented programs, including through targeted core 
                support for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises 
                and local financial markets.''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (C), in the matter 
                        preceding clause (i)--
                                    (I) by inserting ``, particularly 
                                by protecting the use and funding of 
                                local organizations in countries in 
                                which the Agency invests,'' after ``and 
                                sustainability''; and
                                    (II) by inserting ``, especially 
                                women'' after ``the poor and very 
                                poor''; and
                    (C) by striking paragraph (3); and
            (3) in subsection (c), by striking ``subsection (a), 50 
        percent of all microenterprise resources'' and all that follows 
        and inserting the following: ``subsection (a)--
            ``(1) 50 percent of all micro, small, and medium-sized 
        enterprise resources shall be targeted to activities that reach 
        the very poor; and
            ``(2) 50 percent of all small and medium-sized enterprise 
        resources shall be targeted to activities that reach 
        enterprises owned, managed, and controlled by women.''.
    (c) Monitoring System.--Section 253(b) of the Foreign Assistance 
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211b(b)) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, including goals on a 
        gender disaggregated basis, such as improvements in employment, 
        access to financial services, education, enterprise 
        development, earnings and control over income, and property and 
        land rights,'' after ``performance goals'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``include performance 
        indicators to be used in measuring or assessing the 
        achievement'' and inserting ``incorporate Agency planning and 
        reporting processes and indicators to measure or assess the 
        achievement''; and
            (3) by striking paragraph (4).
    (d) Poverty Measurement Methods.--Section 254 of the Foreign 
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211c) is amended to read as follows:

``SEC. 254. POVERTY MEASUREMENT METHODS.

    ``The Administrator of the Agency, in consultation with financial 
intermediaries and other appropriate organizations, should have in 
place at least 1 method for implementing partners to use to assess 
poverty levels of their current incoming or prospective clients.''.
    (e) Additional Authorities.--Section 255 of the Foreign Assistance 
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211d) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``assistance for microenterprise 
        development assistance'' and inserting ``development assistance 
        for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises''; and
            (2) by striking ``and, to the extent applicable'' and all 
        that follows and inserting a period.
    (f) Microenterprise Development Credits.--Section 256 of the 
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2212) is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``microenterprise 
        development credits'' and inserting ``development credits for 
        micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises'';
            (2) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``micro- and 
                small enterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                ``microenterprises'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises'';
            (3) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``microenterprise households lacking full 
                access to credit'' and inserting ``micro, small, and 
                medium-sized enterprises and households lacking full 
                access to credit and other financial services''; and
                    (B) in paragraphs (1) and (2), by striking 
                ``microfinance institutions'' each place such term 
                appears and inserting ``financial intermediaries'';
            (4) in subsection (c), in the matter preceding paragraph 
        (1), by striking ``microfinance institutions'' and inserting 
        ``financial intermediaries''; and
            (5) in subsections (c) and (d), by striking 
        ``microenterprise households'' each place such term appears and 
        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises and 
        households''.
    (g) United States Microfinance Loan Facility.--Section 257 of the 
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2213) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) --
                    (A) by striking ``Administrator'' and inserting 
                ``President'';
                    (B) by striking ``United States-supported 
                microfinance institutions'' and inserting ``United 
                States-supported financial intermediaries''; and
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``United States-
                supported microfinance institutions'' each place such 
                term appears and inserting ``United States-supported 
                financial intermediaries''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``microfinance 
                institutions'' and inserting ``financial 
                intermediaries''.
    (h) Contents of Report.--Section 258(b) of the Foreign Assistance 
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2214(b)) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Contents.--To the extent practicable, the report submitted 
under subsection (a) should contain the following:
            ``(1) Information about assistance provided under section 
        252, including--
                    ``(A) the amount of each grant or other form of 
                assistance;
                    ``(B) the name and type of each intermediary and 
                implementing partner organization receiving assistance;
                    ``(C) the name of each country receiving 
                assistance; and
                    ``(D) the methodology used to ensure compliance 
                with the targeted assistance requirements under 
                subsection (c) of such section.
            ``(2) The percentage of assistance provided under section 
        252, disaggregated by income level, including for the very 
        poor, and by gender.
            ``(3) The estimated number of individuals that received 
        assistance under section 252, disaggregated by income level (or 
        an appropriate proxy for income level, including for the very 
        poor), by gender, and by type of assistance.
            ``(4) The results of the monitoring system required under 
        section 253.
            ``(5) Information about any method in place to assess 
        poverty levels under section 254.''.
    (i) Definitions.--Section 259 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 
(22 U.S.C. 2214a) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Committee on 
        International Relations of the House of Representatives'' and 
        inserting ``Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives'';
            (2) in paragraph (4), by striking ``microenterprises'' and 
        inserting ``micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises'';
            (3) in paragraph (6)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (E), by striking 
                ``microenterprise institution'' and inserting ``micro, 
                small, or medium-sized enterprise institution''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (F), by striking ``microfinance 
                institution'' and inserting ``financial intermediary'';
            (4) by striking paragraphs (7) and (8) and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(7) Micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise 
        institution.--The term `micro, small, and medium-sized 
        enterprise institution' means an entity that provides services, 
        including finance, training, or business development services, 
        for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises in foreign 
        countries.
            ``(8) Financial intermediary.--The term `financial 
        intermediary' means the entity that acts as the intermediary 
        between parties in a financial transaction, such as a bank, 
        credit union, investment fund, a village savings and loan 
        group, or an institution that provides financial services to a 
        micro, small, or medium-sized enterprise.'';
            (5) by striking paragraph (9);
            (6) by redesignating paragraphs (10) through (14) as 
        paragraphs (9) through (13), respectively;
            (7) in paragraph (9), as redesignated, by striking ``of 
        microenterprise development'';
            (8) by amending paragraph (10), as redesignated, to read as 
        follows:
            ``(10) Practitioner institution.--The term `practitioner 
        institution' means a not-for-profit entity, a financial 
        intermediary, an information and communications technology firm 
        with a mobile money platform, a village and savings loan group, 
        or any other entity that provides financial or business 
        development services authorized under section 252 that benefits 
        micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise clients.'';
            (9) in paragraph (12), as redesignated--
                    (A) in the paragraph heading, by striking ``United 
                states-supported microfinance institution'' and 
                inserting ``United states-supported financial 
                intermediary''; and
                    (B) by striking ``United States-supported 
                microfinance institution'' and inserting ``United 
                States-supported financial intermediary''; and
            (10) in paragraph (13), as redesignated, by amending 
        subparagraph (B) to read as follows:
                    ``(B) living below the international poverty line 
                (as defined by the International Bank for 
                Reconstruction and Development and the International 
                Development Association (collectively referred to as 
                the `World Bank')).''.
    (j) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--Title VI of chapter 2 of 
part I of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2211 et seq.) 
is amended in the title heading by striking ``MICROENTERPRISE 
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE'' and inserting ``DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE FOR 
MICRO, SMALL, AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES''.

SEC. 5. REPORT AND BRIEFING BY THE UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR 
              INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Administrator of the United States Agency 
for International Development shall provide a briefing and submit a 
report to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate 
regarding the implementation of this Act and the amendments made by 
this Act, including actions to improve the gender policies of the 
United States Agency for International Development pursuant to section 
3.
    (b) Public Availability.--The report required under subsection (a) 
shall be posted and made available on a text-based, searchable, and 
publicly-available internet website.

SEC. 6. REPORT BY THE COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 2 years after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the United States 
shall submit a report to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House 
of Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate 
regarding development assistance for micro, small, and medium-sized 
enterprises administered by the United States Agency for International 
Development.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required under subsection 
(a) shall include an assessment of the following:
            (1) What is known about the impact of such development 
        assistance on the economies of developing countries.
            (2) The extent to which such development assistance is 
        targeting women and the very poor, including what is known 
        about how such development assistance benefits women.
            (3) The extent to which the United States Agency for 
        International Development has developed a methodology to ensure 
        compliance with the targeted assistance requirement under 
        section 252(c) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as 
        amended by section 4(b)(3), and the quality of such 
        methodology.
            (4) The monitoring system required under section 253(b) of 
        the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended by section 4(c), 
        including the quality, appropriateness, and feasibility of such 
        monitoring system.
                                                       Calendar No. 683

115th CONGRESS

  2d Session

                                S. 3247

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL

To improve programs and activities relating to women's entrepreneurship 
  and economic empowerment that are carried out by the United States 
     Agency for International Development, and for other purposes.

_______________________________________________________________________

                           November 28, 2018

                       Reported with an amendment