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ILO warns of "feminisation of poverty"

Special Correspondent

There is a persistent gender gap in status, job security, wages and education


  • Women must be given chance to work themselves out of poverty
  • They earn less money for the same job done by men

    NEW DELHI: More women than ever before are in work but a persistent gender gap in status, job security, wages and education contributes to "feminisation of working poverty," according to a new report by the International Labour Office (ILO) issued on the occasion of International Women's Day.

    According to "Global employment trends for women brief - 2007," the number of women in the labour market — either in work or looking actively for work — is at its highest. In 2006, the ILO estimated that 1.2 billion of the 2.9 billion workers in the world were women.

    Still the number of women remaining unemployed is higher than before (81.8 million), and more than ever before they are stuck in low productivity jobs in agriculture and services or receiving less money for doing the same jobs men do.

    The share of working-age women who work or are seeking work actually stopped growing or declined in some regions, partially because more young women are pursuing education rather than work. The report says women must be given the chance to work themselves and their families out of poverty through creation of opportunities that help them secure productive and remunerative work in conditions of freedom, security and human dignity. Otherwise, the process of feminisation of poverty will continue and be passed on to the next generation.

    Salaried employment

    The report shows that today more women are in wage and salaried employment (47.9 per cent) than 10 years ago (42.9 per cent). However, the poorer the region, the more likely that women work as unpaid contributing family members or low-income own-account workers, in a higher proportion than men.

    From an unpaid contributing family worker or low-paid own-account worker to wage and salaried employment is a major step toward freedom and self-determination, says the ILO. However, in the poorest regions of the world the share of female contributing family workers in total employment is still much higher than men, with women less likely to be wage and salaried workers.

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