Communication
(10 June 2004) Equal opportunities for men and women in different
spheres remains pending in this region, according to the report, Roads
Toward Gender Equity in Latin America and the Caribbean, prepared
by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)
for presentation at the Ninth Regional Conference on Women in Latin
America and the Caribbean, being held in Mexico City this 10 - 12
June 2004.
The report indicates that almost half of women over 15 years old
living in the region have no income of their own, while just 20% of
men are in this situation. Moreover, according to ECLAC data from
2002, 36.1% of the region's households are under the poverty line,
while 14.6% live in indigence.
When poverty is analysed from a gender perspective, the fundamental
importance of women's financial, physical and reproductive autonomy,
along with the value and time assigned to their unpaid work, is clear.
The ECLAC report points out that financial autonomy, that is a situation
where people have enough income cover their own needs, plays an important
role in anti-poverty efforts. Thus, unequal opportunities affecting
women's access to paid work also limit their chances of being autonomous
in a financial sense. For example, in 2002, the income of women in
the labour force stood at 68% of men's. Similarly, women's participation
rate was 49.7% that year, while their unemployment was 11.1%. For
men, these figures were 81% and 7.7%, respectively.
The fact that a high proportion of female spouses in both poor and
non-poor households are dependent on the household head limits their
financial independence and decision-making ability. Moreover, this
vulnerability becomes worse in the event of widowhood, marital breakdown
or the family's collapse," which must be dealt with by applying
suitable policies that improve the distribution of wealth, assets,
labour opportunities and time", the document points out.
Distribution of Time and Reproductive Rights
According to ECLAC, studies confirm that women invest more time in
unremunerated activities than men, which indicates that they have
longer work days, which can damage their health or nutrition.
On reproductive rights, women's right to the autonomy of their own
bodies should involve access to appropriate sexual and reproductive
health care, to reduce maternal mortality and unwanted fertility rates,
and prepare women to contribute to family health care, all issues
that should be considered in the fight against poverty. The risk of
dying due to factors related to childbirth and pregnancy remain high
in several Latin American and Caribbean countries, especially Haiti,
Bolivia and Peru, where there are more than 200 maternal deaths per
100,000 births, while this figure stands at from 100 to 200 in nine
more countries.
According to the report, this inequity is compounded by the dramatic
impact of AIDS, which profoundly affects women and is becoming the
object of public concern, especially in the Caribbean basin. The latest
national estimates (2003) indicate that VIH among pregnant women has
reached or is more than 2% in six countries: the Bahamas, Belize,
the Dominican Republic, Guyana, Haiti, and Trinidad and Tobago.
In terms of the limitations women face on their earning power, these
primarily reflect inequality in access to, and the distribution, use
and control of productive resources, such as labour, land, capital,
information, new technologies, natural resources and housing.
Anti-Poverty Policies and Programmes
In the past decade, Latin American countries have focused on social
action, following the social policy model that gives priority to investment
in human capital and turns the State into a regulatory body that co-exists
with active participation from state, private and NGO subsectors,
in a more plural and less concentrated manner.
In future, the ECLAC study underlines, it will be necessary to better
coordinate economic, social and environmental policies, to balance
the principles of universality, solidarity and efficiency. From a
gender perspective, this integrated approach should deal with three
fundamental challenges: the redistribution of power, income, assets
and time.
The Ninth Regional Conference will examine the application of international
commitments assumed through the Regional Programme of Action for the
Women of Latin America and the Caribbean, adopted at the Sixth Regional
Conference in 1994 and reaffirmed in 2000 by the Lima Consensus. Likewise,
it will decide on the region's contribution to the 49th session of
the Commission on the Status of Women, to be held in March 2005. The
Conference's work forms part of international commitments regarding
women's progress made at world summits held in the 1990s, the Millennium
Development Goals adopted by the UN General Assembly in New York,
2000, and the Platform of Action adopted by the Fourth World Conference
on women, held in Beijing, China, in 1995.
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