Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
International

Payments For Caring For Kids, Elderly Will Benefit Women: UN's Laxmi Puri

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Apr, 2015 10:52 AM
    Making the care of children, the elderly and the sick into economically paying jobs could become an engine of employment benefiting at least one billion women worldwide, according to Laxmi Puri, a ranking UN official on women's issues.
     
    At the release of a report on the status of women Monday, Puri called for "creating a vibrant new paid care economy" that would benefit women, who are doing most of the unpaid work of caring for children, the elderly and the sick, while mired in poverty.
     
    "If investments were made in quality paid care services, as is happening in some countries, this could meet care needs, reduce unpaid care burdens and become an engine of employment creation while also empowering at least a billion women," she told reporters here.
     
    The report said, "Women still carry the burden of unpaid care work, which austerity policies and cutbacks have only intensified."
     
    "We are demanding nothing less than a new economic agenda and transformation," said Puri, a former Indian diplomat who is now an assistant secretary-general and the deputy executive director of UN Women, the world body's arm dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women.
     
    She said paid and unpaid work for women should be transformed to provide "equal access to paid work, decent work with social protection, fair and adequate earnings and equal sharing of unpaid care work."
     
    These are some of findings in the report, "Progress of the World's Women, 2015-2016: Transforming Economies, Realising Rights:"
     
    * The percentage of women in paid jobs in India had fallen from 34.8 percent to 27 percent between 1990 and 2013. This happened during a period of rapid economic growth in the nation. The numbers for India were among the lowest outside of the Arab world. Globally the percentage of women in paid jobs declined a little, from 52.3 to 50.3 percent.
     
    * In India, the gender pay gap or how much less women were paid than men, was 32.6 percent compared to 23.5 percent world-wide.
     
    * In the Indian poverty alleviation program in India, the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, almost 50 percent of the participants in were women.
     
    * World-wide 83 per cent of domestic workers are women and almost half of them are not entitled to the minimum wage.
     
    Myrtle Witbooi, president of the International Domestic Workers Federation, made a plea for implementing the International Labour Organisation convention on the rights of household workers. A one-time domestic worker herself, she said that their tremendous contribution to the economy should be adequately recognised.
     
    Through their supportive role, domestic workers were the ones who made it possible for those in key positions to perform their jobs, she said. "I don't need your degree," she said of the role of domestic workers. "I have my degree in the kitchen."
     
    India, along with the United States, Britain and other major countries have not ratified the ILO convention, which came into force in 2013. It seeks to ensure minimum, non-discriminatory wages, and to provide them a safe and healthy working environment.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US to identify 'forward-looking agenda' with China

    US to identify 'forward-looking agenda' with China
    US National Security Adviser Susan Rice has said President Barack Obama's upcoming visit to China will be an opportunity to identify "a forward-looking agenda" for the US-China ties....

    US to identify 'forward-looking agenda' with China

    Indian women face sexual harassment in New Zealand

    Indian women face sexual harassment in New Zealand
    Indian women in Auckland, New Zealand's largest and most populous urban area, are facing a wave of sexual harassment from their own countrymen, a media...

    Indian women face sexual harassment in New Zealand

    Obama to nominate new attorney general

    Obama to nominate new attorney general
    US President Barack Obama is to nominate Loretta Lynch, the top federal prosecutor in eastern New York city, to be the country's new Attorney General....

    Obama to nominate new attorney general

    Pakistan, China ink 19 agreements

    Pakistan, China ink 19 agreements
    Pakistan and China Saturday signed 19 agreements and Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) to further boost the bilateral ties between the two countries....

    Pakistan, China ink 19 agreements

    India, Bhutan not to act against other's security interests

    India, Bhutan not to act against other's security interests
    Indian President Pranab Mukherjee, returning from a two-day state visit to Bhutan, described it as "one of my most memorable visits abroad" and said he...

    India, Bhutan not to act against other's security interests

    Why is India-baiter Robin Raphel under FBI scanner?

    Why is India-baiter Robin Raphel under FBI scanner?
    Controversial veteran American diplomat Robin Raphel, under FBI scanner as part of an anti-spying probe, was suspected of taking classified information...

    Why is India-baiter Robin Raphel under FBI scanner?