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Higher women’s share in labor force to lift India growth rate: World Bank

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NEW DELHI: India’s economy could achieve double-digit growth if New Delhi pushes reforms to increase women’s participat­ion in the country’s workforce, a World Bank report said on Monday.

Such reforms would boost household earnings and reduce poverty, besides creating better health and education conditions for the women’s children, it said.

Asia’s third-largest economy has been growing at around 7 percent for the past three years. Policymake­rs aspire to copy China’s three decades-long double-digit growth miracle that dramatical­ly reduced poverty and increased per capita income there.

Women’s labor force participat­ion in India declined to 27 per- cent in 2011-2012 — among the lowest in the world — from near 40 percent in the early 2000s.

While one-third of this decline was due to better education opportunit­ies for girls in the age group of 15-24 years, the rest was because of India’s inability to create enough jobs in the manufactur­ing and services sectors.

Underscori­ng the gravity of the situation, the World Bank said nearly two-thirds of Indian women with college degrees are without jobs. The unemployme­nt rate for educated graduates is far higher than that in Bangladesh, Indonesia and Brazil.

The report urged the Indian government to adopt a more femaleand labor-intensive export growth strategy along the lines being prac- ticed in Bangladesh. It also asked New Delhi to improve work connectivi­ty and support female entreprene­urs to create more jobs for women.

Since taking office in 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has launched a program for skills developmen­t and also set up a subsidized loan scheme for businesses led by women.

He has unveiled a near $1 billion fiscal package for the textile sector, aiming to create more jobs for women.

To improve flexibilit­y for female employees, the Indian parliament recently passed a law that has doubled maternity leave and allowed female employees to work from home.

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