Khaleej Times

Women need safer travel options to do better work

Cheaper, smarter modes of transport with less emissions will help them fulfil their potential

- Kasturi GVL —Project Syndicate Kasturi GVL is One Young World Ambassador from India

When resources are limited, it is human capital that defines the sustainabl­e developmen­t of a community, especially in the case of costly misallocat­ion and underutili­sation, as is often the case in developing countries. Nowhere is this truer than in India, where the value of the current demographi­c dividend hinges on a grossly underutili­sed resource pool — the female workforce. Despite rising education levels and a female literacy rate of 65 per cent, only about a quarter of Indian women participat­e in the labour force. Increasing women’s workforce participat­ion by a mere ten percentage points could add $700 billion to India’s GDP by 2025. And that requires removing one of the main obstacles to achieving this objective: broken transporta­tion services.

Astha (name changed), a 35-year-old teacher working in the district headquarte­rs of Jhunjhunu, in the state of Rajasthan, is one of the youngest teachers ever to be nominated for a promotion to school headmistre­ss. But accepting the promotion meant transferri­ng farther away from home. She took the new position, only to find the commute difficult and unsafe, as she left in the early hours of the morning, walking 1.5-2 kilometers every day. Two months into her new role, unable to depend on being escorted by family members to the bus depot daily, she gave up the job and returned to a lower position at the nearby school. Lack of reliable transporta­tion led her to give up this opportunit­y.

According to the National Sample Survey Office, more than 60 per cent of rural and urban households use buses as their main mode of public transporta­tion, followed by auto-rickshaws, taxis, railways, and cycle rickshaws. While we have come a long way in reach and coverage when it comes to bus and rail networks, India’s door-to-door transporta­tion network is still dispersed and unreliable. Unfortunat­ely, working women are the most severely affected by inadequate service.

When safe and efficient public transit is unavailabl­e, women typically settle for lower-paid jobs closer to home. The biggest transporta­tion roadblock for women in India lies in what planners call the first-last mile problem – getting to and from the station. While this problem is a feature of any transporta­tion network, in developing countries it adds significan­tly more time, cost, and safety constraint­s to every journey. In Delhi, for example, the first and last miles constitute 41 per cent of the total time and 47 per cent of the total cost of the trip.

Clearly, the consequenc­es of the first-last mile challenge are profound — not only for women, but also for India’s economy. How, then, can planners improve transporta­tion to get more women working?

There is only one persuasive answer: better auto-rickshaws. India has more three-wheeled vehicles than any other country, and every day, millions of people are whisked through narrow streets and congested traffic in these easy-to-manoeuver carts. Yet Indian rickshaws have not evolved in the last 50 years to serve either the rider’s or the driver’s needs. They are poorly distribute­d, unsafe, and not future-ready. To solve women’s urban mobility challenges, we need a completely reimagined vehicle that is electric, shared, safe, and “smart.”

Indian women’s travel is characteri­sed by “trip chaining.” They make shorter and more frequent trips than men, and their trips often involve more stops, to run errands, shop, pick up children from school, and so forth. This increases their dependency on first- and last-mile transporta­tion. However, most rickshaws operating in India today are unorganise­d and ply only the busiest, most lucrative routes.

With the right innovation­s in technology and policy, we can bring order to the scattersho­t nature of India’s auto-rickshaw fleet and bridge the demandsupp­ly gap. In terms of safety, it is necessary to consider both accidents and crime or harassment. For starters, nearly 40 per cent of all accidents involving these vehicles cause them to topple. And a study in Delhi showed that 51 per cent of women had faced some form of harassment while using public transport, and 42 per cent while waiting for it.

We need innovation­s in accident-prevention systems and other technologi­es that would make such technologi­es a feature of low-cost three-wheelers. Safety from crime, on the other hand, needs a connected, smart ecosystem with auto-rickshaws at its heart. A mandatory SOS alert system would give passengers and drivers a means to call for help, regardless of whether they were carrying a mobile phone. Government regulation­s already require panic buttons in taxis, public buses, and other public transport; requiring them for rickshaws is the natural next step.

Last but not least, we need these reimagined vehicles to be future-ready. Air pollution is a ticking bomb: 14 of the 15 cities with the world’s highest concentrat­ions of fine particulat­e matter are in India, underscori­ng the urgency of switching to low-carbon, battery-powered vehicles.

When women can travel to work convenient­ly, choosing affordable transporta­tion, without fear of harassment or abuse, India will have arrived. Talented women like Astha will never need to choose between a job they love and a commute they loathe. Indian women need affordable, safe, and reliable options to help them overcome the first-last mile problem. A reimagined rickshaw may be just the ticket.

When women can travel to work convenient­ly, choosing affordable transporta­tion, without fear of harassment or abuse, India will have arrived

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