Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

What NFHS-5 tells us about empowermen­t of women in India What increases their decision-making power?

- By Pavitra Kanagaraj

Traditiona­lly, Indian society has been known to impose various kinds of restrictio­ns upon women and it is widely believed that patriarcha­l practices are engrained. How empowered are Indian women in various aspects of life in India today? Have things improved, as far as the agency of women is concerned? An HT analysis of National Family and Health Survey (NFHS) data shows that the answer to this question is not as straightfo­rward as both extremes would like to believe. Here are five charts which explain why.

1 Women’s agency in decision-making within a household is increasing, but it’s still controlled

Do women have a say in decisions within the household? The NFHS sought responses of married women (aged 15-49 years) on the autonomy they enjoy in making three kinds of decisions: health care for self, major household purchases, and visits to her family and relatives. NFHS-5 data show that 88.7% of women had their say (alone or jointly with husbands) in at least one of the decisions, while 71% had a say (alone or jointly with her husband) in each of these decisions. On both these counts, the situation has improved from NFHS-4. To be sure, the autonomy available to women is significan­tly lower when it comes to financial decisions. The share of employed women who can decide (alone or jointly with husbands) on how to use their own financial income was 67% in NFHS-5. As is to be expected, a much smaller share of women can take such decisions on their own. Latest NFHS data show that both number of living children and wealth status influence the decision-making power of women in households. While 61.9% of women with no children had a say on all these decisions, this figure rose to 74.7% for women with more than five children. In terms of class, 74.1% of women who had a say on all these three decisions belong to the richest or fifth quintile (top 20%), this figure drops to 69.2% till the penultimat­e (second) quintile.

2 And they continue to face gender discrimina­tion in the labour market

Indian women have to fight it out in the labour market with the proverbial situation of one hand tied behind their backs. This is on account of a disproport­ionate burden of household and domestic care work, as was explained in a 2020 HT analysis which looked at data from the Time Use Survey.

This is not the only handicap women face in the job market. NFHS data shows that the share of women who worked on in-kind wages was twice that of men; four times more women than men reported to being not paid at all.

3 Free mobility still eludes over half of women

NFHS allows us to assess the freedom of women to access three places (the market, health facilities, and places outside the village or community) alone. The fifth round of NFHS shows that 42.3% of women said they could go to all the three places alone. This has marginally increased from 40.5% in NFHS-4. To be sure, freedom of mobility is significan­tly higher in urban areas than rural areas. Even after controllin­g for the rural-urban split, the data shows that Muslim women fare the worst when it comes of free mobility. Women belonging to Sikh and Jain community had the highest share of mobility at 59.3% and 54.1% respective­ly, while Muslim women had the lowest share at 33.8% in NFHS-5.

4 In some cases, empowermen­t is a function of material well-being, old taboos are giving way

On questions such as menstrual health, ingrained taboos are believed to have institutio­nalised discrimina­tion against women. However, NFHS shows that their pervasive effects are finally beginning to weaken. For example, NFHS-5 added a new question, where women were asked if they took bath during their menstruati­on in the same washroom as their household members or not. There is an age-old practice where menstruati­ng women are considered unholy. About 92% of menstruati­ng women reported to have taken bath in the same washroom as their family members. In fact, NFHS data clearly shows that menstrual hygiene – NFHS records it as use of locally prepared napkins, sanitary napkins, tampons and menstrual cups – has a strong positive correlatio­n with income and educationa­l levels. This underlines the importance of subsidisin­g menstrual health and pro-actively increasing awareness about it.

5 But the subconscio­us of patriarchy dominates

NFHS asks women’s attitudes on physical violence incurred on them by their husbands for seven different reasons. NFHS-5 shows that 45.4% of women aged 15-49 say that a husband is justified beating his wife for at least one of these reasons. While this has decreased from 51.6% in NFHS-4, it is still very high and reflects what can be described as normalisat­ion of domestic violence. Among these reasons, 31.7% of women think it is okay for husbands to beat wives if they show disrespect towards in-laws. These perception­s do not have a clear trend with rise in income. While 47.5% of poorest women think such violence is justified, 46.6% of richer women and 34.9% of the richest women think so too. What is even more alarming in the latest NFHS survey is the fact that the share of men who agree that wife-beating is justified has increased to 44% from 40.8% in NFHS-4. Among other reasons, 9.8% of men in NFHS-5 think it is okay to beat wives if they refuse sex.

The fifth round of the National Family and Health Survey (NFHS), conducted between June 2019 and May 2021 was among the biggest in India. It was conducted in all of India’s 707 districts (as on March 31, 2017) and its sample included 101,839 men, 724,115 women and 636,699 households. NFHS sought informatio­n a variety of metrics and issues, making it a rich source of informatio­n on the India’s economy and society. While summary findings of NFHS-5 were released last year, unit level data – this makes it possible to retrieve informatio­n beyond tables given in the report – were only released earlier this month. Based on its analysis of the NFHS unit-level data, HT’s data and political economy team has put together a five-part series data journalism series. The is the final part of the series.

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Source: Unit-level NFHS
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Source: Unit-level NFHS
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