October
2017
DISADVANTAGED
WOMEN
More
and better jobs are needed to achieve the Sustainable Development
Goals – especially for women and young people.
By Linda Engel
In the world of work, the global outlook is not
particularly rosy. According to the International Labour Organization
(ILO), the global unemployment rate will hover at 5.7 % this
year, pretty much at the same level as in 2016 (5.6 %). To achieve
the United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), more
and better jobs are needed.
The UN 2030 Agenda and in particular SDG8 stress the relevance of
employment for reducing poverty. SDG8 commits the international community
to achieving productive employment and decent work for all. The latest
ILO (International Labour Organisation) trend report, however, shows
that quite a lot must happen for that goal to be achieved. In 2017,
the ILO expects global unemployment to affect 201 million people,
2.7 million more than in the previous year.
This moderate rise in unemployment is attributed mainly
to deteriorating labour market demand in emerging markets, especially
Brazil. South America’s most populous country was hit by recession
last year, but global economic growth was also weaker than expected.
There is a general shortage of private-sector investment. Moreover,
international trade is slackening. It thus does not seem likely that
the business community will square the circle by creating more jobs
and improving the quality of existing jobs at the same time.
Women are particularly disadvantaged. They are often denied
access to the labour force. The situation is made worse by the growing
number of young job-seekers and the slow pace of economic growth.
Moreover, precarious forms of informal employment condemn many workers
to a life of poverty and permanent insecurity.
Especially in developing countries, rising unemployment and the poor
quality of available jobs are major problems. Masses of people are
self-employed, for instance, or employed by relatives. Tunisian street
vendor Mohamed Bouazizi, whose self-immolation in 2010 triggered the
Tunisian Revolution, became a symbol of the plight of these people.
His suicide was an act of desperation and protest. It was prompted
by the repeated closure of his vegetable stall for lack of a permit
and the subsequent harassment by officialdom and the police.
Precarious forms of employment are not confined to North
Africa; they are even more widespread in South Asia and sub-Saharan
Africa. They account for nearly half of global employment. According
to the ILO, that will not change much in the foreseeable future.
Various scandals in recent years have shown that wage-earners
in formal-sector employment are not necessarily much better off in
developing countries. In Bangladesh’s garments industry, for example,
many seamstresses not only work in terrible safety conditions, as
the collapse of the Rana Plaza factory in 2013 showed. They also work
for wages that they can barely live on.
The ILO forecasts that the number of the working poor
is set to rise in the near future. It expects that, per year, an additional
3 million persons more will be earning less than $3.10 per day. As
it points out, people with smaller incomes struggle to survive.
The poor working conditions in many emerging and developing
countries prompt a growing number of able-bodied young people to migrate
abroad. According to the ILO, nearly one third of the people living
in sub-Saharan Africa can imagine abandoning their homeland for the
dream of a better life. The continuing flow of refugees who set off
to Europe from the North African coast is evidence of this trend.
At the same time, the willingness to migrate is growing in Latin America,
the Caribbean and North Africa.
In contrast to the situation in developing and emerging
countries, unemployment rates are going down in the industrialised
world, though not as fast as in recent years. According to the ILO,
the problem in developed countries is mainly structural unemployment.
It is driven by new technologies and the outsourcing of manufacturing
to lower-income countries. North America’s “rust belt” has been hit,
for example. In Europe, nearly half of the jobless have now been out
of work for more than a year.
Regardless of state borders, women are the most disadvantaged
group in the global labour market. Less than half of the world’s women
even participate in the labour force, which means they are either
in employment or looking for a job. The ILO reckons, however, that
more than two-thirds of women want to work.
The reasons for the low rate of women’s labour-force participation
are mainly socioeconomic and are related to family status, lack of
transport opportunities or ideas about work-life balance. Another
important issue is that some families and societies simply do not
appreciate women’s desire to work.
Looking at the different world regions, the ILO reports
that the gulf between male and female labour force participation is
widest in the Arab states, North Africa and South Asia (see Nassir
Djafari, p. 28 D+C 2017/10). In these regions, the difference in labour-force
participation exceeds 50 percent.
Another challenge is that, even when women are included
in the labour force, they are more likely to be unemployed than men.
For 2017, the ILO expects global unemployment rates of 6.2% and 5.5%
for women and men respectively, and this gender gap is not set to
become narrower in the next few years. The figures are once more worst
for the Arab states and North Africa, where women’s unemployment rate
is twice as high as men’s and exceeds 20 percent.
If one takes paid and unpaid work into account, however,
the female members of a family are likely to work more hours than
their male counterparts. The reason is that they spend time with household
chores, child care and looking after elderly relatives. Women are
also more likely to be contributing work to a family business.
Another gender disparity is in the sectoral pattern of
male and female employment. Women tend to work in education, health
care and other social sectors as well as in the wholesale and retail
trade. The ILO reports that the propensity of men and women to be
engaged in different sectors has increased in the past 20 years.
In 2014, the G20 committed to reduce the gap in labour-force
participation between men and women by 25% by the year 2025 (the “25
by 25” goal). This would not only imply a greater number of jobs;
it would also boost global economic output by almost four percent.
The Arab states, North Africa and South Asia would benefit in particular.
Quite apart from the economic advantages, paid work would create better
opportunities for many women’s personal fulfilment.
According to the ILO analysts, it is essential to change
the way many societies view working women in order to involve more
women in the labour force. At the same time, it is necessary to improve
working conditions for women.
The ILO makes the following specific recommendations:
●
Equal pay for work of equal value should be enshrined in national
law.
●
The sectoral segregation of men and women should be mitigated by equal
access to education opportunities. Moreover, health care and social
professions should be appreciated more.
●
Legislation against gender-specific discrimination makes sense. Public
awareness campaigns, equality bodies and sanctions should then support
law enforcement.
●
Working conditions for men and women should be made more family-friendly
to achieve a better work-family balance.
●
Conditions must improve in the women-dominated care sector. At the
same time, unpaid care work should be reduced and public services
improved.
●
Informal jobs should be formalised. That step disproportionately benefits
women. Apart from the measures specifically designed to promote women,
the ILO demands that the causes of both cyclical and structural unemployment
be addressed. It considers public investments a good way to boost
national economies. – Third World Network Features.
Links
ILO, 2017: World employment social outlook. Trends for women 2017.
http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/- --dgreports/---inst/documents/publication/
wcms_557245.pdf
ILO,
2017: World employment social outlook. Trends 2017. http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/-
--dgreports/---dcomm/---publ/documents/ publication/wcms_541211.pdf
-ends-
About the author: Linda Engel is a free-lance writer. lindaengel@gmx.de
The
above article is reproduced from Development and Cooperation (D+C),
2017/10.
When
reproducing this feature, please credit Third World Network Features
and (if applicable) the cooperating magazine or agency involved in
the article, and give the byline. Please send us cuttings. And
if reproduced on the internet, please send the web link
where the article appears to twn@twnetwork.org.
4587/17