New Straits Times

New IMF chief pledges ‘relentless’ focus on gender equality

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Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director Kristalina Georgieva on Tuesday vowed to fight for greater gender equality at the global lender and around the world, telling a packed audience: “Buckle up. It’s going to come.”

Georgieva, the first person from an emerging economy to lead the IMF and only the second woman, told the IMF’s fall meeting that there was hard work ahead, even at the lender where women account for just 25 per cent of top jobs.

The Bulgarian economist and former World Bank chief executive spoke openly about her battle scars after decades in internatio­nal institutio­ns. She said economic studies clearly showed that improving gender equality would boost growth.

She said she backed quotas for the private sector to accelerate better representa­tion of women in C-suites, citing IMF studies that companies boosted results by eight per cent to 11 per cent if they had women on their boards or senior management.

“I am in favour of quotas because otherwise it will take us a very long time to get to where we want to get,” she said.

When she took over as chief executive of the World Bank in 2017, Georgieva set a goal of achieving gender parity in top roles, and the bank met that target a year later — two years ahead of schedule.

Georgieva said she would also prioritise pay equity at the lender, noting that it was not until she reached a senior position at the World Bank that she realised how much her salary had lagged that of male counterpar­ts for many years.

She said the gender pay gap averaged 16 per cent in advanced economies and was as high as 37 per cent in South Korea.

Georgieva lauded a new IMF working paper on unpaid labour, which showed that women do an average of 2.7 more hours of childcare, houseclean­ing and other unpaid work per day than men.

The study showed the gender gap in unpaid hours had narrowed in advanced economies, but traditiona­l gender imbalances remained in most countries.

Even in Norway, one of the most egalitaria­n countries in the study, women did 20 per cent more unpaid work than men, while in Pakistan they did 1,000 per cent more, said Georgieva.

If such work were included in calculatio­ns of gross domestic product, it would boost economic output by as much as 35 per cent worldwide, said Georgieva. Individual countries could boost GDP significan­tly by getting more women into the workforce.

The study showed that reducing constraint­s to women’s paid work could boost economic output significan­tly.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Internatio­nal Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva says economic studies clearly show that improving gender equality will boost growth.
REUTERS PIC Internatio­nal Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva says economic studies clearly show that improving gender equality will boost growth.

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