Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Culture, gender issues limit rural women’s digital engagement

Women have less time doing online platform work because of the unequal gender division of labor: Working women are still expected to perform house chores and care work, and many women have given up on their jobs because they cannot do both

- Kay

Cultural barriers and disparitie­s in access to technology, job opportunit­ies, and wages limit rural women from engaging in digital platform work.

This was according to a recent study published by state think tank Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies.

Authored by research consultant­s Paul John M. Peña and Vince Eisen C. Yao, the study titled “DigitALL for Her: Futurecast­ing Platform Work for Women in Rural Philippine­s” probed the digital platform work phenomenon in rural areas and underlying conditions that make inclusive and decent work possible for both women and men.

Peña and Yao observed that limited access to devices, erratic power supply, connectivi­ty issues, and digital anxiety among users hound efforts to make rural areas and their residents digitally ready for online jobs.

Some respondent­s admitted being hesitant about learning and using computers even if they knew how to use a smartphone.

In some areas like island barangays, digitaljob­sPH trainees needed to cross the sea to reach the town proper where they can access internet-ready devices in shared facilities.

Digitaljob­sPH is a program of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology that trains and enables individual­s to get digital work through freelancin­g.

Other government initiative­s aimed at expanding the informatio­n and communicat­ions technology labor market to the rural areas include Tech4ED, a self-sustaining and shared facility that offers training and access to computers and the internet and turning areas outside of the National Capital Region into informatio­n technology and business process managemen hubs.

While the digital platform is touted to democratiz­e access to opportunit­ies, the authors found that cultural barriers — including misconcept­ions about perceived innate strengths, skills, and appropriat­e jobs for women, even among decision-makers — limit women to less complex and lower-paying jobs.

They were more likely to perform tasks related to business services, sales, and marketing, not technology and data analytics tasks.

The gender wage gap also persists in digital jobs.

The study highlighte­d that women earn 18.4 percent less than men.

The online platform work allows more women to enter the labor force, especially mothers who prefer online work’s “flexibilit­y in terms of time management” over full-time

However, women have less time spent on platform work and their careers because of the unequal gender division of labor: working women are still expected to perform house chores and care work, and “many women have given up on their jobs because they cannot do both.”

Even among male and female entreprene­urs with the same responsibi­lities, women still face more care work.

The study also noted that the demand for IT-BPM -related onsite jobs remains low in rural areas and local talents had to move to another province to find jobs.

Those who found online freelance projects start as general virtual assistants, some of whom work for below-market rates to undercut competitor­s.

Freelance workers from rural areas may be tempted to set even lower rates just to secure a project.

Others are subjected to dubious offers or fraudulent jobs that leave them unpaid for completed work.

Peña and Yao enumerated policy measures to address the challenges, such as the full implementa­tion of the Free Internet Access in Public Places Act (Republic Act 10929), the passage of the Freelance Workers Protection Act, and a review of policies on competitiv­e pricing for contractin­g work.

They emphasized that policy actions must be supported by efforts to digitize essential public services, especially in rural areas, which will boost confidence in digital technologi­es, develop local government-led plans for ICT infrastruc­ture developmen­t and upskilling that prioritize women from low-income households, and ensure that the supply meets the demand for internet connectivi­ty.

The study identified current trends and developmen­ts in platform work that can propel digital expansion and adoption in rural areas.

These include offering incentives to digitaljob­PH graduates to establish homegrown agencies that will match local talents with platform jobs overseas and securing talent via women-focused grassroots organizati­ons and cooperativ­es that can provide skills training and support.

Peña and Yao also commended initiative­s by cooperativ­es and associatio­ns like FHMoms and Connected Women that help bridge the device and connectivi­ty gap.

FHMoms offer flexible options such as “WiFi para Nanay” that “enable enterprisi­ng mothers who stay at home to participat­e in online freelance projects.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines