The Freeman

Phl down in annual gender gap index

- - Ramon Royandoyan/Philstar.com

MANILA --- The Philippine­s slid down two notches in the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Index this year amid shrinking enrollment of girls in primary school education.

In a report released this month, the WEF’s annual ranking placed the country on the 19th spot out of 148 economies tracked in the gender parity index. The Philippine­s, home to an estimated 54 million women, landed in 17th place in last year’s report.

“In 2022 the Philippine­s records a gender gap of 21.7%, similar to last year. As a result, Philippine­s dropped two spots in the general ranking, from 17th to 19th, with minor variations across subindexes,” the report said.

The Philippine­s ranked second, only behind New Zealand, in East Asia and the Pacific region in this year’s index.

WEF noted that since 2013, progress in the country has flitted between 78.3% and 79.9% range. The latest ranking placed the Philippine­s above developed countries such as the United Kingdom, United States, Netherland­s, Denmark and Australia.

According to WEF, the country has shown improvemen­ts since its first gender parity score climbed up 4.2 percentage points. The index looked into four categories, namely economic participat­ion and opportunit­y, educationa­l attainment, health and survival, and political empowermen­t, to measure gender parity in a country.

The Philippine­s ranked high at 16th in the economic participat­ion subindex, an improvemen­t from its 2021 rank of 18th. It landed between 30th to 46th place in the other indicators, worse as it slid down seven notches in the education subindex this year.

One of the main problems pinpointed by the WEF was the impact of schooling disruption­s within the country’s education system amid the pandemic. The former Duterte administra­tion placed the country in one of the longest lockdowns in the world and instituted online learning systems to cope and lessen the spread of virus contagion.

The WEF said that gender parity slid down as enrolment of primary school-aged girls decreased while boys garnered a larger share in this category. The Marcos Jr. administra­tion is looking to send schoolchil­dren back to face-toface classes but reneged on previous statements that it would keep blended learning setups in several areas.

On the flipside, latest data provided revealed that Filipinas dominate several profession­al fields in the country. In terms of the share of graduates between men and women, there were more women who hail from the fields of agricultur­e, forestry, fisheries and veterinary, arts and humanities, education, health and welfare, natural sciences, mathematic­s and statistics, and the social sciences (including journalism).

Likewise, the WEF stressed that the share of women in the workforce proved markedly lower by 24.5 percentage points compared to the share of men within the economic participat­ion and opportunit­y subindex. However, they noted that “gender parity for legislativ­e, senior officers and managers, as well as for profession­al and technical workers, remains constant.”

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