The Independent

Women bearing the brunt of pandemic jobs shortage

Data from job site Adzuna shows a sharp drop in vacancies being advertised for roles that tend to be filled by women

- JAMES MOORE

In previous columns I’ve noted that the chief victims of the economic crisis wrought by the pandemic have been minority ethnic groups, the young, disabled people such as myself, and women. Jobs website Adzuna has this morning released a trove of data that clearly shows the difficulti­es faced by the latter in the current depressed labour market. This being Internatio­nal Women’s Day, it could hardly have been better timed.

The site’s researcher­s found advertised vacancies within the top 20 occupation­s historical­ly employing the most women slipped 40.2 per cent year-on-year, with hiring falling in 19 of them. Of course, vacancies have

slipped across the board. But hiring activity within the top 20 occupation­s historical­ly employing the most men fell by a significan­tly lower amount: just 11.8 per cent.

Job openings actually increased in 6 of the top 20 male occupation­s, namely warehouse workers (up 37.0 per cent), large goods drivers (76.6 per cent), van drivers (14.0 per cent), electricia­ns (12.8 per cent), carpenters and joiners (15.9 per cent) and constructi­on and building trades (26.0 per cent). In the more female-friendly occupation­s, the declines were quite striking.

Adzuna recorded a 52 per cent fall in vacancies for receptioni­sts, a 42.9 per cent decline in hiring of nursery nurses and assistants, a 49.3 per cent drop in advertised personal assistant and other secretaria­l roles, and a 37.3 per cent tumble in vacancies for hairdresse­rs and barbers. The site recorded just 6,370 vacancies for sales and retail assistants in February, the top occupation for women in 2020, representi­ng a decline of more then 38 per cent on last year’s figure. The sole riser? Care workers and home carers (up 45.9 per cent).

What struck me about that list is that it does make you wonder how much the world of work has really changed from what you might see depicted in a 1950s sitcom. When Adzuna talks about occupation­s that have “historical­ly” employed the most women it’s looking at 2020. Clearly this raises the question of why women are so often shunted into these sorts of roles, and what needs to be done to address the situation. It should also be noted that these jobs tend not to pay terribly well. In fact, Adzuna identified a £6,700 pay gap between the most popular male- and female-held jobs.

It’s worth stating, at this point, that it lists 800,000 jobs, so this is both good data and big data that elegantly slaps down the right-wing trolls who would argue that there is “no need” for events like Internatio­nal Women’s Day. Au contraire. It also shows that both the government and employers need their feet holding to the fire.

What struck me about that list is that it does make you wonder how much the world of work has really changed from what you might see depicted in a 1950s sitcom

When ministers take it into their heads to act they are capable of achieving results. The number of female directors at FTSE-100 firms has increased by 50 per cent in the last five years, for example. Women now hold more than a third of roles in the boardrooms of Britain’s top 350 companies, according to the final report of a review into female representa­tion at the top of business. The government-backed HamptonAle­xander Review therefore achieved its target of 33 per cent.

The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy hailed the numbers and talked of “a culture change at the top paving the way for greater gender parity across business with women’s representa­tion in wider senior leadership also rising”. Well, up to a point. Senior executive roles are still dominated by men, and while the progress that there has been is welcome, Adzuna’s figures show that it clearly isn’t yet being reflected across the workplace as a whole. The firm also noted, for example, that women account for 49.8 per cent of the UK’s profession­al and technical workers, but make up just 36.3 per cent of legislator­s, senior officials and managers (those figures are from a World Economic Forum report).

In a previous interview I conducted with TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady, we touched on the poor representa­tion of women in senior positions. But she made the point that work was needed to improve the situation of women across the workplace. These figures show she was right, and that she was also right to join with several charities to write to the Equality and Human Rights Commission calling for an investigat­ion into whether the government has broken equality law during the pandemic.

Among issues the letter highlighte­d: the failure to carry out equality impact assessment­s on key policy decisions – such as women who have taken maternity leave being eligible only for reduced payments through the Self-Employment Income Support Scheme – and the disproport­ionate financial impact of selfisolat­ion on female workers. Some 70 per cent of the 2 million workers who don’t qualify for statutory sick pay are women. The letter also raised the failure to take into account the additional caring responsibi­lities that have been placed on women as a result of health restrictio­ns and policies affecting schools and childcare.

A TUC survey further found that early three-quarters (71 per cent) of working mothers who applied for furlough in the wake of the most recent school closures had their requests turned down. The Adzuna figures, and those of the TUC, both highlight the urgent need for action from employers and especially from government. This is another area in which the latter’s pandemic policymaki­ng has proved seriously deficient.

 ?? (PA) ?? TUC chief Frances O’Grady has highlighte­d the plight of women workers
(PA) TUC chief Frances O’Grady has highlighte­d the plight of women workers

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