Seizures are gender-blind, but not gender-blind. On the other hand, we have noticed new examples of women being abandoned by the world’s reaction to new challenges. The Covid-19 pandemic is no different.
Covid-19 affects women’s livelihoods more radically than men. Globally, women have lost jobs nearly twice as much as men, accounting for 5 4% of all job losses, accounting for 39% of global employment. other people fleeing home, pandemic lockdowns have a particularly higher burden of unpaid care. According to the Beijing 2five report – Accelerating progress for women and girls, men account for nearly twice the percentage of women (Figure five for some countries) of paid work in unpaid work, the percentage of women is almost three times that of men.
However, women are at the forefront of the global reaction to the pandemic, the mother who helps keep her family circle intact. The fitness employee goes door-to-door in rural communities. Women have once returned proving to be the main gears that keep our societies, nations and economies functioning.
However, the global reaction remains largely unaware of the systemic barriers faced by women around the world. casual sector. Their ability to cope with the economic shock, due to the less resources at their disposal and the limited influence on decision-making processes, is particularly lower than that of men.
What’s at stake in Asia?
According to the 2020 World Gender Gap Report, none of us, or our young people, will see gender parity achieved in our lives, at least not until we are 99. 5 years old. In Asia, many countries are regressing in gender equality.
This symbol that invites reflection reflects the magnitude of the challenge we face.
Gender equality is not only an ethical and social imperative, but also an economic one. Studies show that expanding women’s economic participation accelerates development, is helping to succeed in poverty, and improving children’s nutrition, fitness and schooling. Promoting gender parity is also key details in strengthening national, regional and global economies. Asia-Pacific countries can raise only US$4. 5 trillion to their collective annual GDP, according to McKinsey.
Today, the speech has been aimed at facilitating economic recovery and, unfortunately, there is no evidence that it includes it and its concerns.
Women at the center of recovery
Putting women at the center of our post-pandemic recovery is the right thing to do, but the wisest thing to do is to do it. To emerge more powerful and resilient from the existing pandemic, we want to integrate marginal gender considerations into the mainstream.
First, spaces where women are over-represented and underpaid require special attention, including the informal sector, as well as labour-intensive facilities and manufacturing, and small and micro-enterprises. Covid-19’s economic surprise doesn’t take gender into account.
We can no longer forget these spaces when it comes to support policies. The Autonomous Women’s Association (SEWA), a “movement” of self-employed workers in rural and urban India and the world’s largest union, suggested that the Indian government help 1. 7 million informal sector employees during the Covid-19 crisis. The long-term reaction is significant and productive paintings that will help them succeed over hunger and concern for disease.
Secondly, we want to provide women with marketing with the resources they want to serve as a catalyst for the progress of their communities. Organizations such as The Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship (GAME) and Impact Investment Exchange (IIX) are telling marketing women that they are. not and that his dreams are achievable.
GAME created a Futurepreneur Grand Challenge festival to catalyze women marketers in the Indian city of Bangalore and provided cash at a critical time to the winners: the owner of a bookstore and coffee shop, a catering company and a bakery, among others. has introduced a mentoring program for women marketers in popularity that offering mentors and peer teams can help women grow their businesses and be a contributing agent for change.
Singapore-based capital company IIX indexed the bonus at the time in the Women’s Livelihood Bond (WLB) series on the Singapore Stock Exchange before this year with the Rockefeller Foundation, FENU and Standard Chartered Bank. Unlocking over US$150 million for more than two million. women in Southeast Asia, the WLB series provides in advance a source of income to generate assets and skills to move from subsistence to sustainable livelihoods.
Third, we want to elevate women to leadership positions to drive replacement across society. This year, countries with female heads of state recorded six times fewer pandemic deaths than male-led countries. Women’s representation in political leadership can create situations for a one-off playing field, especially at a time when women’s desires can be easily overlooked. Currently, only 20% of Asia-Pacific MPs are women. It is that representatives of women are included and consulted to advocate for gender policies that create favorable situations as social protection networks for women workers.
Covid-19 has taken control of our global narrative this year, it’s time to boldly prioritize. But we can take the pen and rewrite the long-term of the global by striving for a greater gender balance and putting women at the forefront of recovery. If we do this, not only women themselves, but the creation of tasks, the rebirth of national communities and economies as a whole.
I am the Executive Director of the Rockefeller Foundation in Asia, where I lead projects to convene and catalyze strategic collaborations that advance