Voice grows louder for women’s better financial inclusion
A Chinese women’s affairs official on Wednesday called for improved financial inclusion and the lifting of any barriers women face in accessing financial products and services.
“We have seen that, thanks to financial inclusion for women, many women in rural China have established their own businesses, achieved economic independence,” said Huang Xiaowei, head of the Chinese delegation and deputy director of the National Working Committee on Children and Women under State Council.
“They have gained priority in loans for the first time, owned their personal seals and bank cards for the first time, and bought items like lipstick with their own money for the first time,” she said, adding that the “small changes” in women’s lives have led to “big changes” in gender equality.
Huang spoke at a meeting co-organized by China’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations, the European Union’s Delegation to the UN, and UN Women. The meeting, a side event of the 68th session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women, or CSW, focused on the significance of financial inclusion of women and girls. It aimed to raise awareness and discuss strategies to enhance women’s economic empowerment.
According to the UN Development Programme, 740 million women still lack access to financial services, due to factors including the absence of formal ID, limited financial literacy, poorly designed services and other barriers. In some developing regions, up to 95 percent of women are in jobs that are not protected by law or benefit from social protection.
“Empowering women through financial inclusion plays such a crucial role in promoting gender equality,” said Sarah Hendriks, director for Policy, Programme, Civil Society, and Intergovernmental Support at UN Women.
“It plays a role in advancing also human rights in strengthening vibrant civil societies, ensuring that women’s economic empowerment is supported and realized, as well as in strengthening women’s leadership,” she added.
Huang said that China’s financial inclusion strategy secures policy safeguards for women’s economic empowerment, delivers financial support for their empowerment initiatives, and actively advances gender equality and inclusive economic development.
“Financial inclusion is an effective way to serve the real economy and an important means to promote common prosperity,” said Huang.
In the face of a turbulent international situation, Huang said it is necessary to “further support the empowerment of women and youth, helping them to better respond to a changing world and to utilize their wisdom and potential in the cause of peaceful development”.
The 68th session of the UN CSW, which started on Monday and will run to March 22, is an annual meeting to address inequalities, violence and discrimination against women.