Gulf News

Women hold much of the world’s power

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he appointmen­t of Amina Mohammad from Nigeria as the next Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations is welcomed by the global community. Perhaps someday soon women will be chosen to become Secretary-General, thereby becoming one of the most powerful civilians on Earth. Women will play a pivotal role in the next decade. Over the long sweep of history, women have been and will be a pacifying force. As mothers, women have evolutiona­ry incentives to maintain peace and harmony. Their skills and traits are on the rise. During the next 20 years, the maledomina­ted patriarchy will gradually come to an end.

Within the next five years the global economy will be run by women. By 2050 women legislator­s in the US will wield immense political power. In a report in 2014 in The Guardian, research reveals that violent conflicts would likely decrease by 24 per cent if women were more involved in peacebuild­ing processes. According to the World Bank, in 2015 women made up 49.55 per cent of the global population and, according to the Harvard Business Review, women control $20 trillion in annual consumer spending.

If we desire to urgently navigate through the next world order, then we need to bravely elevate a new paradigm of power involving women. We need decisions to be predicated on sustainabi­lity, not brutal military adventuris­m. A woman’s farsighted and strategic vision could bring stability in this corrupt and war-torn world. Women are a force to be reckoned with from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) to the UN. Their skills and talents have a potentiall­y exponentia­l reach. Let us salute our women in 2017.

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