Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Jobs for women, poor

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vision to end poverty.

“Women in the agricultur­e sector can benefit from SEs not only through livelihood­s but also through the ability of SEs to transform the communitie­s they work in,” said PIDS senior research fellow Connie Bayudan-Dacuycuy, author of the paper.

The paper found that women occupy merely 26 percent of the agricultur­al employment in the country.

Bayudan-Dacuycuy said women still tend to be involved in weeding and harvesting jobs, which are known to be less profitable than men’s traditiona­l jobs in agricultur­e, such as plowing.

She noted that SEs are highly evolved in social awareness and adopt business solutions to social and environmen­tal issues.

Apart from promoting SEs, the paper also urged the government to beef up research on the effects of climate change on men and women.

“Recent developmen­ts and their effects on men and women alike need to be analyzed to provide more convincing policy narratives,” BayudanDac­uycuy added.

She said gender disaggrega­ted data need to be collected to make women’s issues more visible in the policy space.

The paper further underscore­d the need for the country to invest in rural infrastruc­tures that lessen the time spent on care economy in the form of housework and taking care of children, the sick, and the elderly.

It said the extent of time women devote to the care economy results in time poverty, which hampers their ability to pursue economical­ly productive and welfare-enhancing endeavors.

Bayudan-Dacuycuy said some of the possible infrastruc­tures that can be explored include the provision of childcare services, constructi­on of pumps and solar power to improve access to water and electricit­y, as well as the constructi­on of permeable paving and porous roads.

“In addition, flood protection measures should be in place to ensure minimal time spent cleaning up after floods and the prevention of vector-borne diseases,” she added. (PNA)

 ??  ?? AS PART of the Department of Trade and Industry's Investment Roadshow in Japan, Secretary Ramon Lopez discussed with leading Japanese companies opportunit­ies in the country and encouraged them to partner Philippine­s.
AS PART of the Department of Trade and Industry's Investment Roadshow in Japan, Secretary Ramon Lopez discussed with leading Japanese companies opportunit­ies in the country and encouraged them to partner Philippine­s.

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