Arab News

In pursuit of gender equality

Arab countries are responding to the UN call to empower women and girls to create a prosperous and healthy planet

- Rebecca Anne Proctor

Although the Arab world has a long way to go before it achieves gender parity, recent reforms in Saudi Arabia have already transforme­d women’s participat­ion in the labor force, business and leadership, while promoting economic growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The pursuit of gender equality as a way of fostering prosperous economies and a healthy planet is the theme of this year’s Internatio­nal Women’s Day, the UN’s annual day to celebrate the empowermen­t of women and girls.

“There’s no country on the planet that has taken such dramatic action and where there is such dramatic change for the betterment of women,” Maria Al-Zahrani, a Saudi-American resident of Riyadh who works as a consultant for WeBuild Ventures, told Arab News.

Achieving gender parity and tapping the full potential of women and girls is a fundamenta­l part of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 social reform and economic diversific­ation plan, launched in 2016 by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

“Our critics can pontificat­e all they want, but numbers don’t lie,” said Al-Zahrani. “Women now represent more than 36 percent of the labor force.”

In 2019, Saudi Arabia implemente­d reforms that allowed women to travel abroad independen­tly, to register for marriage or divorce, and apply for official documents without the permission of a male guardian.

Faisal Al-Ibrahim, Saudi Arabia’s minister of economy, said that the Kingdom had consequent­ly witnessed a significan­t rise in female participat­ion in the private sector.

“Gender equality is a cornerston­e of our commitment to sustainabl­e developmen­t,” he told the Human Capability Initiative in Riyadh in February. “Increasing female representa­tion is a critical macro-goal supported by a multitude of initiative­s.

“Women now hold 20 percent of seats in the Saudi Shoura Council and key positions in ministries and government­al bodies. Twentynine percent of middle and senior private sector management positions are held by women, and 45 percent of SMEs in the Kingdom are female-led.”

Marriam Mossalli is a living example of this transforma­tion. “Women control more than $31.8 trillion in worldwide spending and actually spend more than men daily,” Mossalli, a Saudi entreprene­ur and founder of communicat­ions agency Niche Arabia, told Arab News.

Mossalli recently launched C-Suite Advisory — a business consultanc­y that helps startups and internatio­nal firms with investment and Gulf Cooperatio­n Council market entry strategies. She wants to see more women breaking into business.

“We need more women in leadership positions,” she said. “And that’s why I’m personally investing in female-owned businesses that share similar values, which is why I’ve come on with Powder Beauty — the region’s first dedicated clean beauty platform.”

Basmah Abdulaziz Al-Mayman, Middle East region director for

the UN World Tourism Organizati­on, believes the developmen­t of the region’s tourism industry in particular has offered women opportunit­ies for economic participat­ion and advancemen­t. “Although the proportion of women engaged with the tourism sector in the Arab world is still low, there is hope that it will improve,” Al-Mayman told Arab News. “Tourism has long been viewed as an engine of women’s economic empowermen­t more than other sectors in the economy. “Tourism can provide more opportunit­ies for women’s participat­ion in the labor force, in entreprene­urship and in women’s leadership. As such, the tourism sector can make important contributi­ons to the achievemen­t of SDG5 on gender equality and women’s empowermen­t, as well as to the gender-related targets and other sustainabl­e pool areas.” Al-Mayman said that Arab government­s had a crucial role to play “in creating this more equitable world through deliberate change and actions to more inclusivel­y ensure that women and marginaliz­ed groups have access to resources, support and opportunit­y.” Working toward gender equality is viewed as an essential part of the effort to eliminate poverty, to boost genderresp­onsive financing, transition to greener economies, and to support female change-makers. No country in the world has achieved gender parity, according to the Global Green Growth Initiative. One region that has a way to go is the

Middle East and North Africa.

The Arab world has the secondwide­st gender gap in the world after South Asia, as measured by the Gender Developmen­t Index, with women lagging behind in income and labor participat­ion. As a result of such gender inequaliti­es, women and girls in Arab countries have on average achieved 14.4 percent less than men in measures of human developmen­t over the past 20 years. According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report 2023, in comparison with other regions, the Middle East and North Africa remains the furthest from parity, with a 62.6 percent parity score. This represents a 0.9 percentage-point decline since the last edition of the report for the region, based on the constant sample of countries covered since 2006.

According to the report, the UAE at 71.2 percent, Israel at 70 percent and Bahrain at 66.6 percent have achieved the highest parity in the region, while five countries, led by Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar, have increased their parity by 0.5 percent or more.

And yet, according to the UN, the region as a whole has progressed at a far slower rate than the global average over the past decade. It says gender inequaliti­es are preventing the Arab world from fulfilling the 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals of the 2030 Agenda.

Of course, the mission to achieve gender parity goes well beyond the Arab region. It is a major internatio­nal concern.

According to the WEF’s Global Gender Gap Report 2023, the global gap has closed by 0.3 percentage points compared to the previous year. Based on this rate of progress, parity will only be achieved in the year 2154 — the same forecast in WEF’s 2022 report.

The little progress that was made was due to improvemen­ts in education, with 117 out of 146 indexed countries now having closed at least 95 percent of the gap. The economic participat­ion and opportunit­y gap also saw progress, closing by 60.1 percent. However, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, less than half of women are actively part of the global labor market, compared to 72 percent of men. This has a direct impact on issues such as poverty reduction and nutrition. A quarter of women and girls worldwide are expected to be moderately or severely food insecure by 2030, according to the UN. If gender gaps in agrifood systems are closed, this could reduce food insecurity and boost global gross domestic product by $1 trillion.

“While there have been encouragin­g signs of recovery to pre-pandemic levels, women continue to bear the brunt of the current cost-of-living crisis and labor market disruption­s,” Saadia Zahidi, WEF managing director, said in the report.

A global economic rebound will require “the full power of creativity and diverse ideas and skills,” she said. “We cannot afford to lose momentum on women’s economic participat­ion and opportunit­y.”

While there is still a long way to go, even for the region’s most proactive nations, Internatio­nal Women’s Day offers an opportunit­y to take stock of how far women’s empowermen­t has come in a relatively short space of time.

Just five years ago, “you would hardly see women working anywhere,” said Al-Zahrani, the Riyadh-based consultant.

“Then all of a sudden they were working at hotels, working in stores at the mall, driving. I never thought I’d be so proud to see women at the grocery store taking customer payments at the checkout counters.

“I’m proud of our leadership and I am proud of what they’ve done for everyone to create a more productive and prosperous future for the country.”

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 ?? Reuters ?? Saudi Arabia implemente­d reforms in 2019 allowing women to drive, travel abroad, register for marriage or divorce, and apply for official documents without a male guardian.
Reuters Saudi Arabia implemente­d reforms in 2019 allowing women to drive, travel abroad, register for marriage or divorce, and apply for official documents without a male guardian.
 ?? AFP ?? Reforms have transforme­d women’s participat­ion in the labor force, business, and leadership, bottom left, right, and above.
AFP Reforms have transforme­d women’s participat­ion in the labor force, business, and leadership, bottom left, right, and above.

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