Women and girls make up half of the world's population; however, in most countries, women are underrepresented in the political process at the national level. As this report shows, women currently hold 23.4% of legislative seats around the world, an increase from 11.8% of legislative seats in 1998 (see Figure 1). As of November 1, 2018, women held 50% or more of the legislative seats in three countries: Rwanda, Cuba, and Bolivia (see Table 3). At the executive level, 23 countries currently have an elected female head of state or government. Since 1960, about 110 women have been elected or appointed as head of the national government in approximately 70 countries.1
The participation and representation of women in elected government is generally considered healthy for their communities. As Heather Nauert, then-Acting Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, and State Department Spokesperson, stated in March 2018, "the low status of women and girls has vast political, economic, and social implications. It can limit the ability of communities to resolve conflict, countries to boost their economies, or regions to grow enough food."2
Supporting efforts to empower women, the 115th U.S. Congress enacted the Women, Peace, and Security Act of 2017 (P.L. 115-68) with the aim to increase the participation of women in conflict prevention and conflict resolution processes as a means to build more inclusive societies and to help stabilize countries and regions. This act expressed the sense of Congress that "the political participation, and leadership of women in fragile environments, particularly during democratic transitions, is critical to sustaining lasting democratic institutions."3 Past Congresses have appropriated funds for programs operated by the Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to establish governments that are representative and inclusive, as well as programs to empower women politically and economically.4
This report provides a global snapshot of women's political participation worldwide by compiling statistics and other information from a variety of sources, including The Global Gender Gap Report 2018 issued by the World Economic Forum, the Inter-Parliamentary Union, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, the CIA World Factbook, news reports, and other sources.
The right to vote is a primary step toward involving a populace in the political decisions of a government. In many countries, voting rights were originally granted only to adult men who owned property, then were eventually expanded to include all adult male citizens regardless of property ownership, then women, and then other underrepresented groups. Definitions of what constituted a "citizen" may also have changed over time, even as they did in the United States, and gradually have become more inclusive of minorities and indigenous peoples. Other countries enacted universal suffrage from their very foundings, granting the right to vote to all adults, male and female, regardless of ethnicity, religion, economic standing, or other criterion.
Table 1 and Table 2, respectively, list the first and latest countries to extend the right and duty of voting to women. Although subnational regions (e.g., states, provinces) may have granted the right to vote earlier, the years in the tables below indicate when suffrage was extended for national elections to female adult citizens.
Year |
Country(ies) |
Year |
Country(ies) |
1893 |
New Zealand |
1917 |
Canada* |
1902 |
Australia* |
1918 |
Austria, Estonia, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, Ireland*, Kyrgyz Republic, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, United Kingdom* |
1906 |
Finland |
1919 |
Belarus, Belgium*, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Sweden*, Ukraine |
1913 |
Norway |
1920 |
Albania, Czech Republic, Iceland**, Slovak Republic, United States |
1915 |
Denmark, Iceland* |
1921 |
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Sweden** |
Source: The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), http://archive.ipu.org/wmn-e/suffrage.htm.
Notes: Some countries granted suffrage in stages, at first denying the right to women of certain racial, ethnic, or economic groups. One asterisk (*) indicates the first year female citizens were allowed to vote in national elections with limitations; two asterisks (**) indicate when those limitations were removed. No asterisk indicates there were no restrictions and all female adult citizens were granted the right to vote.
Year |
Country |
2003 |
Qatar |
2005 |
Kuwait |
2006 |
United Arab Emirates |
2013 |
Saudi Arabia |
Source: Pamela Paxton and Melanie M. Hughes, Women, Politics, and Power: A Global Perspective, 2nd edition, SAGE Publications, 2014, p. 50-51; and the CIA World Factbook on Suffrage, at https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/resources/the-world-factbook/fields/311.html#AF.
Women's suffrage has been closely linked to women's participation in legislative bodies. In 1907, the voters of Finland elected 19 women to the country's new unicameral parliament a year after Finnish women were granted suffrage; this was the first election in the world in which the names of both female and male candidates appeared on the ballot. On the other end of the spectrum, women voted and appeared on ballots in Saudi Arabia for the first time in 2015.
Several countries have instituted quotas to ensure that women are represented on the ballot or in the legislature. Similar quotas may also be used to ensure ethnic or religious diversity in the national legislature of some countries (e.g., Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iraq).
The Atlas of Electoral Gender Quotas explains that "[g]ender quotas are numerical targets that stipulate the number or percentage of women that must be included in a candidate list or the number of seats to be allocated to women in a legislature. They aim to reverse discrimination in law and practice and to level the playing field for women and men in politics." The Atlas further states that "gender quotas have proved to be the single most effective tool for 'fast-tracking' women's representation in elected bodies of government."5
Three main types of gender quotas are generally recognized, and they may be used at the national or subnational level, or both:
Table 3 shows the number of seats held by women in the national legislative chambers of selected countries. The countries listed include the 19 nation members of the G-20 (excluding the European Union) and the 12 countries that have legislative bodies with 40% or more of the seats held by women. Two members of the G-20—South Africa and Mexico—are included in the 12 countries with more than 40% women legislators.
Table 3. Female Representation in National Legislatures of Selected Countries
As of November 1, 2018, and January 4, 2019 (for the United States)
IPU Rank by % of Total Seats Held by Women |
Country |
Type of Legislative System |
National Level Gender Quota Codesa |
Total Legislative Seats |
Total Seats Held by Women |
% of Total Seats Held by Women |
1 |
Rwanda |
Bicameral |
RS |
106 |
59 |
55.7 |
2 |
Cuba |
Unicameral |
None |
605 |
322 |
53.2 |
3 |
Bolivia |
Bicameral |
C, P |
166 |
86 |
51.8 |
4 |
Mexico |
Bicameral |
C, P |
628 |
304 |
48.4 |
5 |
Sweden |
Unicameral |
P |
349 |
161 |
46.1 |
6 |
Nicaragua |
Unicameral |
C, P |
92 |
42 |
45.7 |
7 |
Costa Rica |
Unicameral |
C, P |
57 |
26 |
45.6 |
8 |
Finland |
Unicameral |
None |
200 |
84 |
42.0 |
9 |
Senegal |
Unicameral |
C, S |
165 |
69 |
41.8 |
10 |
South Africa |
Bicameral |
P |
450 |
187 |
41.6 |
11 |
Belgium |
Bicameral |
C |
210 |
87 |
41.4 |
12 |
Norway |
Bicameral |
P |
169 |
70 |
41.4 |
15 |
Argentina |
Bicameral |
C, P |
329 |
130 |
39.5 |
26 |
France |
Bicameral |
C, P |
924 |
330 |
35.7 |
27 |
Italy |
Bicameral |
P |
950 |
338 |
35.6 |
38 |
Australia |
Bicameral |
P |
226 |
74 |
32.7 |
41 |
Germany |
Bicameral |
P |
778 |
245 |
31.5 |
44 |
Canada |
Bicameral |
P |
431 |
134 |
31.1 |
53 |
United Kingdom |
Bicameral |
P |
1,441 |
417 |
28.9 |
69 |
China |
Unicameral |
RS |
2,980 |
742 |
24.9 |
96 |
United States |
Bicameral |
None |
528 |
127 |
24.1 |
103 |
Saudi Arabia |
Unicameral |
RS |
151 |
30 |
19.9 |
104 |
Indonesia |
Unicameral |
C |
560 |
111 |
19.8 |
121 |
Turkey |
Unicameral |
P |
596 |
104 |
17.4 |
123 |
South Korea |
Unicameral |
C, P |
300 |
51 |
17.0 |
139 |
Brazil |
Bicameral |
C, P |
594 |
89 |
15.0 |
157 |
India |
Bicameral |
Sub only |
779 |
91 |
11.7 |
Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service using data from the Inter-Parliamentary Union at http://archive.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm, and the Gender Quotas Database at https://www.idea.int/data-tools/data/gender-quotas/database, published by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, as posted on December 20, 2018.
Notes: The selected countries listed here include the 19 national members of the G-20 (excluding the European Union) and the 10 countries with the highest percentage of legislative seats held by women in the national legislative body.
a. Three codes indicate the type of gender quota used in the country: C=legislated quotas for candidates on the ballot level; RS=legislated quotas for reserved seats; P=voluntary party quotas; Sub only=quotas at the subnational level only, as identified by the Gender Quotas Database.
Table 4 lists countries where women hold fewer than 8% of the legislative seats.
Tonga: 7.4% |
Iran: 5.9% |
Lebanon: 4.7% |
Micronesia: 0% |
Benin: 7.2% |
Maldives: 5.9% |
Kuwait: 3.1% |
Papua New Guinea: 0% |
Tuvalu: 6.7% |
Sri Lanka: 5.8% |
Haiti: 2.7% |
Vanuatu: 0% |
Kiribati: 6.5% |
Nigeria: 5.8% |
Solomon Islands: 2.0% |
|
Comoros: 6.1% |
Thailand: 5.3% |
Yemen: 0.5% |
Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union, as of November 1, 2018, http://archive.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm.
Over the years, the percentage of seats held by women in national parliaments has risen worldwide from 11.8% in January 1998 to 23.4% by January 2018 (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Worldwide Percentage of Seats Held by Women in National Legislatures 1998-2018 |
![]() |
Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service using data from the Inter-Parliamentary Union available at http://archive.ipu.org/wmn-e/world-arc.htm. |
As shown in Figure 2, the countries of the Americas, Europe (excluding the Nordic countries), and the Arab States increased the percentage of legislative seats held by women by 14.4% of seats or more from 1998 to 2018.
Figure 2. Regional Percentages of Seats Held by Women in National Legislatures 1998-2018 |
![]() |
Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service using data from the Inter-Parliamentary Union, available at http://archive.ipu.org/wmn-e/world-arc.htm. |
At least 70 countries have chosen a woman as their executive since Sirima Bandaranaike of Sri Lanka was selected as the world's first female Prime Minister in 1960. Executives may be selected through various methods: directly elected from a ballot dedicated to the executive office; indirectly elected by the legislature; appointed, following legislative elections, as the leader of the majority political party or majority coalition; or through other indirect means.
Country |
Name |
Title |
Dates in Office |
Ethiopia |
Sahle-Work Zewdea |
President |
Oct. 25, 2018–present |
Barbados |
Mia Mottley |
Prime Minister |
May 25, 2018–present |
Trinidad and Tobago |
Paula-Mae Weekesa |
President |
Mar. 19, 2018–present |
Romania |
Viorica Dancilaa |
Prime Minister |
Jan. 29, 2018–present |
Iceland |
Katrin Jakobsdottir |
Prime Minister |
Nov. 30, 2017–present |
Aruba |
Evelyn Wever-Croesa |
Prime Minister |
Nov. 17, 2017–present |
New Zealand |
Jacinda Ardern |
Prime Minister |
Oct. 26, 2017–present |
Singapore |
Halimah Yacoba |
President |
Sept. 14, 2017–present |
Hong Kongb |
Carrie Lama |
Chief Executive |
July 1, 2017–present |
Serbia |
Ana Brnabic |
Prime Minister |
June 29, 2017–present |
Turks and Caicos Islands |
Sharlene Cartwright-Robinsona |
Premier |
Dec. 20, 2016–present |
Estonia |
Kersti Kaljulada |
President |
Oct. 10, 2016–present |
United Kingdom |
Theresa May |
Prime Minister |
July 13, 2016–present |
Taiwan |
Tsai Ing-wena |
President |
May 20, 2016–present |
Burmac |
Aung San Suu Kyia |
State Counsellor |
Apr. 6, 2016–present |
Marshall Islands |
Hilda C. Heinea |
President |
Jan. 28, 2016–present |
Nepal |
Bidhya Devi Bandhara |
President |
Oct. 29, 2015–present |
Croatia |
Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic |
President |
Feb. 19, 2015–present |
Malta |
Marie-Louise Coleiro Preca |
President |
Apr. 4, 2014–present |
Norway |
Erna Solberg |
Prime Minister |
Oct. 16, 2013–present |
Lithuania |
Dalia Grybauskaite |
President |
July 12, 2009–present |
Bangladesh |
Sheikh Hasina |
Prime Minister |
1996–2001; Jan. 6, 2009–present |
Germany |
Angela Merkela |
Chancellor |
Nov. 22, 2005–present |
Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service using information from the CIA World Factbook, available at https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/resources/the-world-factbook/fields/312.html#AG, and the Global Gender Gap 2018, published by the World Economic Forum, at https://www.weforum.org/reports/the-global-gender-gap-report-2018, and news sources.
Notes: Surnames appear in bold face.
a. This woman is the first female to hold this position in her country.
b. Hong Kong is a Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, but it enjoys a high degree of autonomy. Although President Xi Jinping is China's chief of state, Chief Executive Carrie Lam is recognized as the head of Hong Kong's government and, as such, is responsible for the day-to-day governance of Hong Kong.
c. Provisions in Burma's 2008 constitution prohibit Aung San Suu Kyi from holding the position of President. As the leader of the National League for Democracy, the majority party in the national legislature following the 2015 parliamentary elections, she was selected by the parliament for the new position of State Counsellor, created in April 2016. She is recognized as the de facto leader of the civilian side of Burma's government, which includes a robust military component. She concurrently serves as the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister for the Office of the President. Burma's current President is Win Myint, a close friend of Aung San Suu Kyi.
Other women leaders in the 21st century include the following:
Table 6 identifies several notable female executives in the 20th century.
Country |
Name |
Title |
Years in Office |
Sri Lanka |
Sirimavo Bandaranaike |
Prime Minister |
1960-1965; 1970-1977; 1994-2000 |
Bandaranaike was the world's first female Prime Minister |
|||
India |
Indira Gandhi |
Prime Minister |
1966-1977 and 1980-1984 |
Gandhi was assassinated while in office; she was succeeded by her son, Rajiv. |
|||
Israel |
Golda Meir |
Prime Minister |
1969-1974 |
Meir and her husband immigrated to then Palestine in 1921. She was a founder of the State of Israel and the fourth prime minister. |
|||
Argentina |
Isabel Martinez de Perón |
President |
1974-1976 |
Peron was world's first female president. |
|||
United Kingdom |
Margaret Thatcher |
Prime Minister |
1979-1990 |
Thatcher became the first woman prime minister in Europe and was the only British prime minister in the 20th century to be elected to three consecutive terms. |
|||
Philippines |
Corazon Aquino |
President |
1986-1992 |
Pakistan |
Benazir Bhutto |
Prime Minister |
1988-1990 and 1993-1996 |
In January 1990, Bhutto became the first prime minister to give birth while in office. New Zealand's current prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, became the second prime minister to do so, having a daughter in June 2018. |
Source: Compiled by the Congressional Research Service using news and other sources, such as the Encyclopedia Britannica and Gale Biography in Context.
Sandra Delaney, CRS summer intern, and Jennifer Roscoe, CRS research assistant, helped in gathering data and presenting key points.
Author Contact Information
1. |
The Global Gender Gap Report 2018, prepared by The World Economic Forum, December 18, 2018, https://www.weforum.org/reports/the-global-gender-gap-report-2018. |
2. |
Heather Nauert, remarks at the 2018 Annual International Women of Courage Awards Ceremony, Washington, DC, March 23, 2018, https://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2018/03/279541.htm. |
3. |
P.L. 115-68 §3(2). |
4. |
P.L. 115-141, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, Section 7059(b) appropriated $50 million "to increase leadership opportunities for women in countries where women and girls suffer discrimination due to law, policy, or practice, by strengthening protections for women's political status, expanding women's participation in political parties and elections, and increasing women's opportunities for leadership positions in the public and private sectors at the local, provincial, and national levels." This language was repeated in both H.R. 6385 and S. 3108, introduced in the 115th Congress for FY2019 Department of State and Foreign Operations appropriations. |
5. |
The Atlas of Electoral Gender Quotas was a joint project of the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), the Inter-Parliamentary Union, and Stockholm University, published in June 2014, p. 16, available at https://www.idea.int/publications/catalogue/atlas-electoral-gender-quotas?lang=en. |