The Pak Banker

Covid devastates India's self-employed women

- Mirai Chatterjee

Lasuben Shivlal Raval is a 70-year-old grandmothe­r from Ahmedabad in India. She has worked as a 'headloader' - a goods carrier - in one of the city's biggest wholesale cloth markets for decades.

Her work was always tough, but life became immeasurab­ly harder for Lasuben and her fellow workers when Covid-19 struck and business slumped. Yet she has not given up, and in her position as the leader of the local headloader­s she has helped coordinate assistance for her sister workers.

The efforts of Lasuben and thousands of aagewans, or local women leaders, has been crucial in the current crisis. Embedded in their communitie­s, they have been pivotal in providing health education and awareness about coronaviru­s, as well as linking people to basic medical care.

The impact of COVID-19 in India has been devastatin­g, and the burden has not fallen equally. Women employed in the country's huge informal economy have been hit disproport­ionately hard as millions of livelihood­s have become even more precarious or evaporated completely. As the world looks beyond the current crisis to a postpandem­ic future, it is essential to ensure lower-skilled workers like Lasuben are not left behind by the shifting tectonic plates of the global labour market, and that they have the tools to achieve self-reliance.

The task is daunting. Women employed as domestic workers in India's cities - frequently migrants from rural areas - have lost work in vast numbers, forcing many to return to their home villages. Those working as street vendors could not sell their goods due to lockdowns and manual labourers have also seen demand for their services disappear overnight.

This dire situation is made doubly hard by the increased demands on women to provide unpaid care to the sick, the elderly and young children during the health emergency and prolonged lock-downs. With schools and childcare centres shut for over a year now, the challenges are manifold.

This loss of work and rise in care demands has left many women and their families struggling for survival. Unsurprisi­ngly, it is the poorest and most vulnerable households that are the worst affected, with many now going hungry and having to cope by cutting back their food consumptio­n.

The problemati­c combinatio­n of informal work, poverty and gender bias is common in many developing nations, but it is particular­ly acute in India, given the structure of the economy and society. The country has one of the world's highest rates of informal employment - and the pandemic has increased this further, leaving the vast majority of citizens outside the protection of labour laws or any social security net.

Today, an estimated 93% of the workforce, or 500 million people, work informally in India, compared to a global average of 61%.

With unemployme­nt rising in both urban and rural settings, the situation is particular­ly severe for women, who tend to have lower-paying and less secure work than men. As result, women have suffered more livelihood losses than men during the pandemic, as pre-existing gender inequaliti­es exacerbate an already difficult situation. What is more, the experience from India's first wave of COVID-19 was that men are the first workers to be taken back as lockdown restrictio­ns are eased.

Faced with this erosion of livelihood­s, there is an urgent need for a cooperativ­e approach to help women - both to help them survive the crisis in the short term and to get them back on their feet to find gainful employment in the longer term.

My organizati­on, the SelfEmploy­ed Women's Associatio­n (SEWA), has half a century of experience in organizing women through a joint strategy of union and cooperativ­es. Inspired by the values of Mahatma Gandhi, it brings together 1.8 million informal women workers across 18 Indian states in a national trade union. Today, we are putting this collective strength to work to fight the devastatio­n caused by the pandemic.

We support women like Lasuben and Ayeshaben, a garment worker turned health worker. She first joined the cooperativ­e movement without being able to read or write but is now a key member of a healthcare cooperativ­e that disseminat­es informatio­n on sexual-reproducti­ve health and provides COVID-19 relief.

We have provided community health kits and food boxes to selfemploy­ed women leaders, as well as teleconsul­tations with doctors and counsellor­s in half a dozen different languages.

At the same time, we must look to the future, given the structural obstacles facing informal women workers in India.

 ??  ?? “She first joined the cooperativ­e movement without being able to read or write but is now a key member of a healthcare cooperativ­e that disseminat­es informatio­n on sexual-reproducti­ve health and provides COVID19 relief.’’
“She first joined the cooperativ­e movement without being able to read or write but is now a key member of a healthcare cooperativ­e that disseminat­es informatio­n on sexual-reproducti­ve health and provides COVID19 relief.’’

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