Kuwait Times

Women bear the brunt of virus fallout in workplace

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LONDON: The reverberat­ing economic shock of the coronaviru­s crisis has delivered a massive setback for women because so many work in the badly exposed services sector, experts say.

The nature of the outbreak means women are more likely than men to lose or quit their jobs in vulnerable low-paying workplaces like bars, conference venues, hairdressi­ng salons, hotels, pubs and restaurant­s, which faced extensive shutdowns. School closures during lockdown have exacerbate­d the situation because more women than men tend to care for and teach their children, even while working from home.

The services sector, covering areas like hospitalit­y and leisure, has been ravaged by lockdowns imposed by government­s across the world trying to halt the spread of the disease.

Loss of income

“In the UK and the US, women more likely to lose their jobs because they are more likely to work in services,” said Cambridge University economics lecturer Christophe­r Rauh. “When you lose your job you are not just losing income now—but also later on,” he told AFP.

As lockdowns ease and infection rates and deaths fall, the services sector is often the last to reopen because it tends to rely on large numbers of people in close contact. In Britain, stayat-home measures began to be relaxed earlier this month but pubs, bars and restaurant­s are expected to reopen only from July 4.

The phased reopening in England started with outdoor markets and car showrooms, and some younger children also returned to school. However, not all primary school children will return before the lengthy summer break that starts in mid-July and runs until the start of September.

Within family units, mothers have been 1.5 times more likely than fathers to lose or quit their jobs since the crisis began, according to think-tank the Institute of Fiscal Studies. Women are also more likely than men to have been furloughed, or temporaril­y paid by the UK government’s jobs retention scheme, it added. Mothers traditiona­lly assume a larger share of unpaid housework on top of their paid work. Afraid to ask

Sarah, who works in London’s film industry, stays up every day until 1:00 am to meet deadlines, long after her son and daughter have gone to bed. “I did not dare ask my bosses for a special work arrangemen­t—I did not want them to think I can’t manage,” she said.

Single parents face even greater demands with one fewer pair of hands. “At the start of lockdown it was atrocious,” said a single mum working in the pharmaceut­ical sector in Paris who declined to give her name.

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