Examining the Woman’s Linkage Between Their Income and Expenses in Afghanistan Along with Some Case Examples in Takhar Provinces
Abstract
The main purpose of this research is to examine the relationship between women's income and their expenses in Afghanistan with the case example of Takhar Province and show: how much of women's income is directed to which type of expenses, do women contribute to family expenses or No. The method of the research depends on the field study, and its statistical term consists of Takhar's population and (the government's staff). The sample size used by YAMANI methods, among 14443 employees 380 of them have been selected as a sampling size. The tools of data collection are the questionnaires, along with 14 specific enquires the individual's specification is also added to the questionnaires. The collected data has been analysed through the program of the SPSS24 and some multiple tests being applied. Cronbach's alpha for the variables is equal to (0.724), the multiple correlation coefficient (R) is more than 1, and (0.103) shows that the dynamic process is better and there is also a strong correlation between the variables. The significant level is less than (0.05) which shows a successful model. The result of the research indicates, an increase of one percent of the woman's income (5.7%) consumed on cosmetic and luxury expenses (fashion, and makeup) (7.4%) allocated to families, accommodation of food items, (7.9%) spent on textile and fabrics, (8%) put to the housing, (7%) gold saving, (9.2%) goes to their children education cost, (7.5%) family’s loan payment, (7.6%) on woman’s parties, (7.5%) spent on gifts, and (5.9%) is re-invested by women. Also, with the increase of every percent in women’s income (7.9) % of them goes to the parent’s households, and (9%) is consumed by the head of the families. As briefly, that only one percent increase of the woman income 91% of them consumed in above-mentioned line.
Copyright (c) 2022 Hafizullah Aiuby, Deyana Danishwar, GULAQA ANWARI
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Copyright for this article is retained by the author(s), with first publication rights granted to the journal. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).