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GENEVA
(ILO News) – More women are working than ever before, but they are
also more likely than men to get low-productivity, low-paid and
vulnerable jobs, with no social protection, basic rights nor voice at
work according to a new report by the International Labour Office
(ILO) issued for International Women’s Day.
“Global employment trends for women – March 2008”
*/, released on the occasion of
International Women’s Day, says that the number of employed women
grew by almost 200 million over the last decade, to reach 1.2 billion
in 2007 compared to 1.8
billion men. However, the number of unemployed women also grew from
70.2 to 81.6 million over the same period.
“Women continue to enter the world’s workforce in
great numbers. This
progress must not obscure the glaring inequities that still exist in
workplaces throughout the world.,” said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia.
“The workplace and the world of work are at the centre of
global solutions to address gender equality and the advancement of
women in society. By
promoting decent work for women, we are empowering societies and
advancing the cause of economic and social development for all.”
The report shows that improvements in the status of
women in labour markets throughout the world have not substantially
narrowed gender gaps in the workplace. The share of women in
vulnerable employment-- either unpaid contributing family workers or
own-account workers, rather than wage and salaried work-- decreased
from 56.1 to 51.7 per cent since 1997. However the burden of
vulnerability is still greater for women than men, especially in the
world’s poorest regions.
Other key findings of the report:
▪
Worldwide, the female unemployment rate stood at 6.4 per cent compared
to the male rate of 5.7 per cent.
▪ Less than 70 women
are economically active for every 100 men globally. Remaining outside of the labour force is often not a choice but an
imposition. It is likely that women would opt for remunerated work
outside the home if it became acceptable to do so.
▪
At the global level, the female employment-to-population ratio – which
indicates how much economies are able to take advantage of the
productive potential of their working-age population – was 49.1 per
cent in 2007 compared to a male employment-to-population ratio of 74.3
per cent.
▪
Over the past decade, the service
sector has overtaken agriculture as the prime employer of women. In
2007, 36.1 per cent of employed women worked in agriculture and 46.3
per cent in services. In comparison, male sectoral shares were 34.0
per cent in agriculture and 40.4 per cent in services.
▪
More women are gaining access to education, but equality in
education is still far from reality in some regions.
New policies for promoting female employment
The report points out that for many women, moving away
from vulnerable employment into wage and salaried work can be a major
step toward economic freedom and self-determination, and that the
poorer the region, the greater the likelihood that women remain among
the ranks of the contributing family workers or own-account workers.
Access
to labour markets and to decent and productive employment is crucial
in the process of creating greater equality between men and women,
says the report. The study observed that
the most successful region in terms of economic growth over the last
decade,
East Asia
, is also the region with the highest employment-to-population ratio for women (65.2 per cent), low
unemployment rates for both women and men and relatively small gender
gaps in sectoral as well as status distribution.
Overall,
the report found that policies to enhance women’s chances to participate
equally in labour markets are starting to pay off, but the
sluggish pace of change means that disparities are still significant.
Most regions have still a long way
to go in full economic integration of women and realizing their
untapped potential for economic development.
Broadening
access for women to employment in an enlarged scope of industries and
occupations will be important to enhancing opportunities for them in
the labour market, says the report. Society’s ability to accept new
economic roles for women and the economy’s ability to create decent
jobs to accommodate them are the key prerequisites to improving labour
market outcomes for women, as well as for economic development on the
whole.
“Access to labour markets and to decent employment is
crucial to achieving gender equality,”
says Evy Messell, Director of the ILO’s Bureau for Gender Equality,
which will host a discussion by women who have made a mark in the
world of finance and eminent trade unionists on International
Women’s Day , focusing on the value of investment in women’s
development. “Yet women have to overcome many discriminatory
obstacles when seeking jobs. Societies cannot afford to ignore the
potential of female labour in reducing poverty, and need to search for
innovative ways of lowering economic, social and political barriers.
Providing women an equal footing in the workplace is not just right,
but smart.”
*/
Global employment trends for women –March 2008, International
Labour office,
Geneva
, 2008. ISBN 978-92-2-121034-4 (print)
ISBN 978-92-2-121035-1 (web pdf)
For
more information please contact:
Sophy Fisher
Regional Information Officer
ILO Regional Office for
Asia
and the Pacific
Tel: +662 288 2482
Krisdaporn Singhaseni.
Information Officer – ILO
Bangkok
Tel: +66 (0)
2288 1664

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