Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada promising $100M for global 'care economy'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2021 01:14 PM
  • Canada promising $100M for global 'care economy'

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada will spend $100 million over the next five years on global projects to address the unequal burden women bear caring for others.

He made the pledge in a speech at the Generation Equality Forum being held in Paris this week, seeking to reverse the outsized impact COVID-19 has had on women and girls.

The forum is looking for global commitments to help restore gender-equality gains lost in the last two years as women around the world faced more sexualized violence, and were forced out of the economy at alarming levels, be it from insecure jobs that were the first to be eliminated in shrinking, closed economies, or because they had to stay home and look after children or elderly relatives.

"The pandemic has shone a strong light on what women and feminists knew for decades, and that is that child-care services are vital," Trudeau said, speaking from Ottawa by video link.

Oxfam Canada executive director Lauren Ravon said Canada is the first country to donate targeted funds to the "care economy," a term to describe work, both paid and unpaid, that involves nurturing and supporting others, including children, the elderly and people who are disabled, and leisure and personal services jobs.

Research has shown much of this work is undervalued and underpaid, if it is paid at all, and falls more often to women, people of colour, new immigrants or temporary foreign workers.

"This is a trailblazing commitment by the Government of Canada and I applaud the government for its bold feminist leadership," Ravon said in a written statement.

She said investing in care jobs "drives economic growth, reduces poverty and inequality, tackles sexist norms and supports gender equality."

Multiple studies have shown women were disproportionately hit by the pandemic's economic wounds, losing more jobs and taking longer to recover. Many women were forced to leave the workforce to care for young children when schools and daycares were shuttered, or to take on extra roles caring for elderly parents or sick relatives, or people with disabilities.

International Development Minister Karina Gould says she thinks employers are far more aware now the critical role care work plays in their own business success.

"I think one of the things that came to light with the pandemic is that we actually value care work in a new way that we didn't pre-pandemic," she said. "We kind of took it for granted. Now, there is an understanding, not just by the women and the caregivers themselves as to how important it is, but also to employers, to society at large."

She says the government is investing $30 billion over the next five years to create a national child-care program with better access and lower fees.

Internationally, she says, Canada is calling for proposals on how to spend $100 million over the next five years on projects that help women who are providing both paid and unpaid care work in developing countries.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. man not at 'immediate risk' to reoffend

B.C. man not at 'immediate risk' to reoffend
The man who killed a 13-year-old girl and injured her friend at a high school in Abbotsford, B.C., has been asked to read the victim impact statements related to his crime before he addresses the court.

B.C. man not at 'immediate risk' to reoffend

Heat warnings extend in B.C., reach Alta., Yukon

Heat warnings extend in B.C., reach Alta., Yukon
Temperatures into the 40s are expected for many parts of B.C., as the weather office says an exceptionally strong ridge of high pressure has parked over the province and likely won't budge until after Canada Day.

Heat warnings extend in B.C., reach Alta., Yukon

Trudeau says July 1 should be day of reflection

Trudeau says July 1 should be day of reflection
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says this Canada Day should be a time of reflection. His comments come the day after a First Nation in Saskatchewan announced ground-penetrating radar had detected what are believed to be 751 unmarked graves at the site of a former residential school.

Trudeau says July 1 should be day of reflection

B.C. doctor wants action to prevent tragic falls

B.C. doctor wants action to prevent tragic falls
Dr. Ash Singhal of B.C. Children's Hospital said it's also the provincial government's responsibility to change the building code so windows in homes can't be opened enough for young children to tumble out.

B.C. doctor wants action to prevent tragic falls

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest
Mounties arrested 10 more protesters Thursday as they continued to enforce an injunction against blockades near old-growth forest logging areas west of Victoria. RCMP say all the arrests were made at an encampment in the Braden Mainline Forest Service Road area near Port Renfrew, B.C.

10 more arrested at old-growth logging protest

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries
BC Ferries has announced walk-on passengers can book online starting Thursday for routes departing Tsawwassen, Swartz Bay, Duke Point, Horseshoe Bay and Departure Bay.

Walk-on passengers can now book on BC Ferries