China Daily

Pandemic risks undoing gains for women

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BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned on Saturday that the pandemic risked rolling back progress made on gender equality, as women take on the lion’s share of childcare in lockdown and are more likely to work in at-risk jobs.

“We have to make sure that the pandemic does not lead us to fall back into old gender patterns we thought we had overcome,” Merkel said in a video message ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day on Monday.

“Once again, it’s more often women who have to master the balancing act between home schooling, childcare and their own jobs,” said the veteran leader.

Women also outnumber men in care profession­s at a time when those jobs are “particular­ly challengin­g”.

“More than 75 percent of those working in the health sector are women, from doctor’s offices and hospitals, to labs and pharmacies,” Merkel said.

Yet women account for barely 30 percent of management positions in those areas.

Merkel welcomed recent legislatio­n requiring listed German companies to include more women on their executive boards.

But she said more should be done to support women, including through expanding childcare facilities and equal pay.

“Women must finally earn the same as men,” she said.

Germany has one of the European Union’s largest gender pay gaps, with women earning on average 19 percent less than men in 2019, partly because many German women work part-time.

Merkel’s warnings were echoed in the EU’s annual report on gender equality released earlier this week. The study found the pandemic “has exacerbate­d existing inequaliti­es between women and men in almost all areas of life”.

On top of increased childcare burdens from school and nursery closures, it said women were also more likely to work in low-paid jobs in the services sector worst affected by the shutdowns.

It could “take years, or even decades” to overcome the gender setbacks caused by the pandemic, it said.

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