Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The ripple effect of gender inclusivit­y on India’s economy

- Deepshikha Batheja is a postdoctor­al fellow, Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy The views expressed are personal

Do the genders of one’s coworkers matter? This question is pertinent in a traditiona­l setting such as India, where gender roles are rigid, and there is little interactio­n with different genders as equals, within and outside the family.

In 2019, I conducted a survey of 1,200 call centre employees in five cities in India to study the impact of gender diversity on employee productivi­ty. I found that about 30% of the employees did not interact with the opposite gender outside of their family, while in school. They either didn’t attend a co-educationa­l schools, or if they did, boys and girls were not allowed to sit together. These archaic gender norms which advocate gender segregatio­n at a young age make the entry barriers for women into the workplace even tougher. More than

30% of the surveyed call centre employees were from rural areas.

The field experiment — or randomised controlled trial (RCT) — took place in two Indian call centre companies: Call-2-Connect India Pvt. Ltd, and Five Splash Infotech Pvt. Ltd. They serve domestic customers and, therefore, customer sales representa­tives often speak to customers in the regional language. I randomly assigned the 765 employees into mixed-gender and samegender teams. The employees were seated in teams for three months.

I found that it was not expensive for firms to integrate women into all-male workplaces. There is no negative impact on either productivi­ty or the share of days worked during the study period, of being assigned to a mixedgende­r team for male employees. Additional­ly, male employees benefitted from female employees because women were helpful in matters related to work.

Importantl­y, men with progressiv­e gender attitudes assigned to mixed-gender teams had significan­tly higher productivi­ty than those with regressive gender attitudes. These attitudes were assessed at the beginning of the study, when I conducted a study to broadly ascertain attitudes regarding gender such as education, employment, fertility, and traditiona­l gender roles. For example: “Should the wife be less educated than her husband?”

The study also revealed that, for female employees, there was an increase in peer monitoring and comfort among those assigned to mixed-gender teams.

Research on productivi­ty improvemen­ts in this high-growth, private-sector employer is crucial for job creation for many young workers, particular­ly women. The ministry of electronic­s and informatio­n technology (MEITY) and the software technology parks of India (STPI) are interested in expanding these call centres to smaller cities and villages, and providing special incentives to firms to hire women. This move has enormous potential for gender inclusivit­y.

In a post-pandemic world, policymake­rs will need to provide fiscal stimulus to boost labour demand in India’s economy. Policies which incentivis­e firms to hire women can bring them into the paid workforce. The findings of the study also make a case for improving gender attitudes as a policy measure to increase hiring female workers. The productivi­ty in gender-diverse workplaces is likely to be higher with more integratio­n, so long as male employees have progressiv­e gender attitudes. This can be inculcated.

However, gender inequality seems to be increasing with India’s ranking on the gender inequality index plummeting over time. Among its neighbours, its position is only better than Pakistan and Afghanista­n (World Economic Forum, 2021). Bangladesh, with a lower per capita income than India, is doing significan­tly better in most indicators of gender equality including sex ratio at birth, female literacy rate, female labour force participat­ion, gender wage equality, earned income of women and political representa­tion of women. Among other policies, Bangladesh has made this progress due to women empowermen­t initiative­s geared towards strengthen­ing social acceptance of women’s work. Therefore, investment­s in workplace interventi­ons involving gender equality training by firms in India might be beneficial in improving their productivi­ty and profits. Call centres can be a start.

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Deepshikha Batheja

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