Manila Bulletin

IMF: Teleworkin­g puts the poor, young, women at disadvanta­ge amid pandemic

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WASHINGTON, United States (Xinhua) — Workers in food and accommodat­ion, and wholesale and retail trade, are the hardest hit for having the least “teleworkab­le” jobs, with the poor, the young and women being more vulnerable than others, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF).

“Young workers and those without university education are significan­tly less likely to work remotely,” Mariya Brussevich, Era Dabla-Norris and Salma Khalid wrote in an IMF blog published Tuesday, noting that the crisis could amplify intergener­ational inequality.

The three IMF economists said women could be particular­ly hit hard, “threatenin­g to undo some of the gains in gender equality made in recent decades.”

This, according to them, is because women are disproport­ionately concentrat­ed in the hardest-hit sectors like food service and accommodat­ion, and women carry a heavier burden of childcare and domestic chores, while “market provision of these services has been disrupted.”

The authors also found that part-time workers and employees of small- and medium-sized firms face a greater risk of job loss. “In developing economies, in particular, parttime workers and those in informal work face a dramatical­ly higher risk of falling into poverty,” they said.

In a recently published study, the three IMF economists estimate that over 97.3 million workers, equivalent to about 15 percent of the workforce, are at high risk of layoff and furlough across the 35 advanced and emerging countries in their sample.

They found that the impact on low-income and precarious­ly-employed workers could be particular­ly severe, amplifying long-standing inequities in societies.

“Our finding – that workers at the bottom of the earnings distributi­on are least able to work remotely – is corroborat­ed by recent unemployme­nt data from the United States and other countries,” they said. “The COVID-19 crisis will exacerbate income inequality.”

The authors also found significan­t difference­s across countries even for the same occupation­s. “It is much easier to telework in Norway and Singapore than in Turkey, Chile, Mexico, Ecuador, and Peru, simply because more than half the households in most emerging and developing countries don’t even have a computer at home,” they said.

As for what government­s can do in this situation, the authors urged policymake­rs to focus on assisting the affected workers and their families by broadening social insurance and safety nets to cushion against income and employment loss, saying “wage subsidies and public works programs can help them regain their livelihood­s during the recovery.”

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