Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Achieving gender equality: Quo vadis, Sri Lanka?

- Ashani Abayasekar­a Tharindu Udayanga

What are some of the challenges women in Sri Lanka face from a gender equality standpoint and how can we tackle them? Below are the responses from Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka (IPS) researcher­s Ashani Abayasekar­a, Kithmina Hewage, Harini Weeraseker­a, Chathurga Karunanaya­ke and Tharindu Udayanga.

The failure to translate Sri

Lanka’s female educationa­l achievemen­ts into similar achievemen­ts in the labour market is a long-standing puzzle. Even among the employed women, the share in managerial positions and STEM fields like engineerin­g and IT, which are typically high-skilled and offer higher earning potential, are negligible. A key underlying reason is ingrained cultural norms about the gender division of household chores; that is, women have lower chances to engage in more demanding jobs as primary bearers of family responsibi­lities.

Better provision of quality and affordable childcare, active labour market policies that inform women about job openings and career opportunit­ies, mentoring schemes and other interventi­ons that minimise gender stereotype­s and biases in work settings and flexible work arrangemen­ts – such as part-time work and work-fromhome options – can potentiall­y help bring more women into productive employment.

Kithmina Hewage

The small and medium enterprise­s form the backbone of the Sri Lankan economy.

Te womenled SMES in particular face considerab­le structural challenges because of policies, processes and cultural biases that limit the scope for economic growth as well as empowermen­t. This is why we see women facing challenges such as lack of access to finance, harassment in public and private sector institutio­ns and numerous other challenges.

Structural issues can be solved through better intersecti­onal representa­tion but that representa­tion should not just be tokenistic. We need to make sure that insights are taken into considerat­ion and then translated to actionable policies and processes that solve these structural problems.

Harini Weeraseker­a

One of the issues affecting working women in Sri Lanka is the lack of flexible working hours and conditions granted by employers.

Although the private sector in Sri Lanka has made some headway in this respect, the public sector still has a fairly rigid nine to five work policy in place, except for the brief pandemic work-from-home stint that was experience­d over the last year. Accommodat­ing this as a long-term policy option in sectors where it is possible to do so would be progressiv­e – rather than it being a one-off pandemic-only policy.

Flexible working options for women is a strategy that can be implemente­d to increase the country’s low female labour force participat­ion rate and for it to work, employers should move towards results-based evaluation criteria as opposed to the standard time/attendance-based evaluation­s that we see today.

Chathurga Karunanaya­ke

Closing gender gaps in the labour market is one of the most pressing challenges today both globally and locally.

The challenges are reinforced by gender wage gaps, voluntary or involuntar­y discrimina­tion in the workplace and archaic legislatio­n that makes hiring women more expensive, as well as work environmen­ts that are unfriendly towards females.

To bridge these gaps, the country needs to: (1) ensure having equal remunerati­on for work of equal value, (2) introduce policies that change convention­al gender ideologies that hinder women’s participat­ion in nonregular work environmen­ts and (3) introduce more targeted interventi­ons that enable female night work, shift work and working from home.

As a whole, these policy reforms should acknowledg­e that the bulk of unpaid family and household work is currently performed by women. Realising these policy targets will require a cohesive effort on the part of the government, policymake­rs and the corporate sector.

We have smart, educated women in the country but the percentage of women who are in political and public decisionma­king bodies remains dismally low. Sri Lankan women, especially younger ones, need to acquire marketable skills and be encouraged to take up STEM (Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Math) subjects so that the imbalance in the field of science and technology – where men vastly outnumber women – can be rectified. Women should also receive equal pay.

Providing career developmen­t initiative­s, improving access to part-time/flexible work thereby enabling them to maintain a work-life balance and addressing socio-physical constraint­s are essential to support women in the workforce. Such measures can generate overall economic gains for the country, while also bringing about a more equitable sharing of developmen­t benefits.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka