Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

How the Internet can stop women from leaving jobs

In the last five years, womenowned small and medium businesses on Facebook in India have gone up sevenfold

- ANKHI DAS

third of women in urban India and half in rural areas who engage mainly in housework actually want a paying job. What is holding them back is a combinatio­n of societal pressures, not being trained or skilled and a lack of mobility – in the sense that many women are not allowed to leave home without permission from the men in their family.

This is where the Internet can help. The greater the participat­ion of female entreprene­urs, the greater the impact on the global economy. All over the world, it is estimated that approximat­ely one third of the business organisati­ons are owned by women. A recent research found that women in South Asia start a business mainly to have a source of income, to pursue an interest or hobby, to be more independen­t, and to be more creative. Also, the proportion of single-led businesses is significan­tly higher among women (56%) compared to men (43%).

Contrary to the country’s statistics of women dropping out of the workforce, in the last five years (between 2012 and 2016), the number of new women-owned small medium business enterprise­s on Facebook in India has increased seven-fold, growing 85% from 2015 to 2016.

Digital media can be the equaliser for women and give women access to new opportunit­ies, new markets, new ideas - all from their own home. Bringing more and more women into the digital workspace can be part of the solution.

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