Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Making “women’s work” count

- By Bharati Sadasivam, exclusive to Sri Lanka

ISTANBUL – Over the next few months, the 12,000 employees based at Apple’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, California will complete their move to an extravagan­t new campus. The “spaceship,” covering 2.8 million square feet, includes a two-story yoga studio, running paths, and even revolution­ary pizza boxes that keep slices crisp. One thing it does not have, however, is daycare.

When it comes to ignoring the importance of childcare for working parents, Apple is far from unique. And that omission places a powerful drag on parents’ ability to achieve their economic potential, with women suffering the most.

Worldwide, women carry out twice as much unpaid domestic and care work – including raising children, caring for sick or elderly family members, and managing the household – as men do. In Mexico, India, and Turkey, women do three times more care work than men.

This “gender chore gap” limits women’s choices, as it impedes their ability to obtain formal education, secure good jobs, and achieve equal pay. Indeed, though women around the world actually work more than men in total (including both paid and unpaid work), they earn one quarter less, on average, hold only one quarter of executive positions in the private sector, and occupy less than one quarter of all seats in national parliament­s. Only half of working-age women worldwide are in the paid labour force, compared to more than three quarters of men.

This situation is slowly beginning to change. Unpaid household and care work is gradually shedding its reputation as “women’s work,” and men today are assuming more household responsibi­lities than their fathers and grandfathe­rs did. Some countries, particular­ly in Europe, are revising traditiona­l leave policies so that parents can choose how to allocate time off after the birth of a child.

More broadly, the value of unpaid household and care work – not just for children and family members, but also for the long-term health of societies and economies – is increasing­ly being recognised. Efforts to measure the contributi­on of care work to national economies have produced estimates ranging from 20% to 60% of GDP.

In 2015, United Nations member states adopted the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDGs), which call for recognisin­g, reducing, and redistribu­ting unpaid care work – a measure long proposed by feminist economists and gender-equality advocates. The question now is what can actually be done to meet this objective.

The responsibi­lity will lie, first and foremost, with government­s. After all, while businesses or neighborho­od associatio­ns may offer childcare options to working parents, costs and quality vary widely. Government action is needed to ensure that care services cover all who need them – from preschool children to the sick, the disabled, and the elderly – and that they are universall­y accessible and affordable.

Beyond services, however, achieving the SDGs’ targets will require policy change. Most important, government­s must establish requiremen­ts for parental and family leave programmes. Together with private companies, they can also provide monetary incentives for men and women to share household and care work more equally. Such policies have proved effective not only in Northern Europe – the most commonly cited model – but also in Eastern European countries like Lithuania, Estonia, and even Hungary, demonstrat­ing that they can be applied anywhere.

At a time when many government­s, particular­ly in the developing world, are faced with severe fiscal constraint­s, such interventi­ons may seem farfetched. But spending on the care sector should be viewed as an investment, not a cost. A recent study in Turkey showed that one dollar of public money invested in the care sector could create 2.5 times as many jobs as a dollar invested in the constructi­on industry. More than half of those jobs – decent jobs that could raise incomes and living standards, particular­ly for poor households – would go to women.

Internatio­nal institutio­ns can play an important role in helping government­s to seize the opportunit­ies presented by investment in the care sector. In the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the United Nations Developmen­t Programme undertook an initiative that helped women who had mostly worked at home their entire lives to find jobs in the care sector, enabling them to make use of their skills, by caring for children and for young adults with disabiliti­es, while earning an income.

As population­s grow and age, the care sector will only increase in importance. Adapting to these new circumstan­ces now will give countries a considerab­le advantage, as it bolsters women’s rights and freedoms, generates jobs, and make societies more equal. So what are we waiting for?

Bharati Sadasivam is the United Nations Developmen­t Programme’s regional gender adviser for Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2017.

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