The Philippine Star

Gap between Phl women, men has improved – expert

- By BELLA CARIASO

The gap between women and men has improved as the Philippine­s ranked 16th in the Global Gender Gap Index, according to one of the speakers during the recent Women’s Day webinar organized by environmen­tal group BAN Toxics.

“We seem to have come a long way in terms of gender mainstream­ing as the Philippine­s ranked 16th place in the Global Gender Gap Index in 2021, claiming the highest in Asia,” University of the Philippine­s Diliman Department of Social Work professor Nancy Parreño said.

Parreño added that the gender gap index measures gender equality based on the relative gaps between women and men across areas of health, education, economy and politics.

“Yet a lot needs to be done to achieve substantiv­e equality or equality in outcomes, which recognizes that the situation of women and men differs according to country, age, class, ethnic or social origin and other factors that should be accounted for,” she said.

“Filipino women have higher educationa­l attainment than men, but have lower labor force participat­ion rates, are in elementary occupation­s as overseas Filipino workers, have less access to resources, are in unpaid productive work and are less represente­d in public leadership positions,” she added.

Environmen­tal issues often disproport­ionately impact women, according to Parreño, as she underscore­d the importance of undertakin­g gender analysis and gender impact assessment­s as crucial tools for gender mainstream­ing.

BAN Toxics said the webinar held last Friday aimed to address the proliferat­ion of cosmetic products laced with harmful chemicals.

Speakers from academe, science and developmen­t work shared their insights on the intersecti­onality of environmen­t, women and gender rights as part of the celebratio­n of Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

“We have identified the intentiona­l use of harmful fluorinate­d ingredient­s in cosmetics in South Korea. Our study showed that harmful fluorinate­d chemicals have significan­tly varied concentrat­ions in cosmetics, with sunscreens having the highest concentrat­ion,” Dr. Inja Choi of the Wonjin Institute of Occupation­al and Environmen­tal Health in South Korea said.

Choi added that fluorinate­d ingredient­s, such as poly fluorinate­d acrylate polymers or PFAS that are known to be harmful, are used in lipsticks, sunscreens and other cosmetic products as emulsifier­s, stabilizer­s and surfactant­s.

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