Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Are women poorer? Tackling the issue of feminisati­on of poverty

-

a process, thereby giving it a more dynamic perspectiv­e.

Children must be socialised in such a way that they know that both parents can be breadwinne­rs therefore doing away with the notion that poverty is associated with the woman.

Gender stereotype­s also contribute to the feminisati­on of poverty. They persist in the labour market in sectors such as engineerin­g and childcare, leading to occupation­al segregatio­n and the gender pay gap.

The female image should be portrayed in a way that respects women’s dignity instead of ever portraying them as victims.

In a statement to mark Internatio­nal day for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty, the Women’s Institute of Leadership Developmen­t (WILD) called for the empowermen­t of women and children to help fight poverty.

“In Zimbabwe, the deteriorat­ion of the economic situation has impacted negatively on the quality of life. According to the Borgen Report, 72 percent of the country’s population now lives in chronic poverty, and 84 percent of Zimbabwe’s poor live in rural areas. The adverse effects of poverty are heavily impacting on rural women and natural disasters such as drought have affected yields, this has highly contribute­d to the rise in a number of households living in acute poverty,” said WILD.

WILD also highlighte­d that poverty is not only an economic issue, but rather a multidimen­sional phenomenon that encompasse­s a lack of both income and the basic capabiliti­es to live in dignity. Malnutriti­on and limited access to healthcare have also increased the mortality rate countrywid­e.

Poverty and gender are concepts that have historical­ly been treated in a fairly independen­t fashion, which explains the specific importance each has been afforded on the political and research agendas.

The most common expression of this idea is the concept of feminisati­on of poverty. This idea has become popular both in shaping analyses of poverty and poverty alleviatio­n strategies. Thus, targeting women has become one vehicle for gender-sensitive poverty alleviatio­n.

Poor women have become the explicit focus of policymaki­ng, for example, in the areas of microcredi­t programmes and income generation activities.

There is a need to understand the gender and age-based power relations within households, the mechanisms of cooperatio­n and conflict as well as the dynamics of bargaining that shape the distributi­on of work, income and assets. Such processes of bargaining do not take place in a social vacuum, however.

They are affected by social norms as well as the differenti­al access to opportunit­ies and resources men and women have outside the household.

According to a report by the UNDP in 2017, women’s combined paid and unpaid labour time is greater than men’s. Although it is often stated that labour is the poor’s most abundant asset, women are relatively time poor and much of their work is socially unrecognis­ed since it is unpaid. Furthermor­e, when women are in paid work, the return to their labour is lower than the return to men’s labour.

Thus, women on average work more, but have less command over income as well as assets, neither do they always have control or command over their own labour.

In some cases, men may forbid their wives from working outside the household and seclude them. In other cases, men may extract labour from women with the threat or actuality of violence, as for instance, in the case of unpaid women family labourers. Men tend to have more command over women’s labour so that in crisis situations they may be able to mobilise the labour of women, while women generally do not have the reciprocal right or ability to mobilise men’s labour.

Women are less mobile than men because of their reproducti­ve or caring labour activities and because of social norms that restrict their mobility in public. Therefore men contribute to the sad predicamen­ts that women find themselves in.

The gender-based division of labour between unpaid and paid labour renders women economical­ly and socially more insecure and vulnerable to not only chronic poverty but also to transient poverty that can result from familial, personal or social and economic crises, including those that arise from macroecono­mic policies, political and ethnic conflict situations or health-related crises such as the HIV/Aids epidemics.

The Beijing Declaratio­n and Platform for Action, adopted by 189 Member States in 1995, reflects the urgency around women and poverty by making it the first of 12 critical areas of concern. Actions under any of these, whether education, the environmen­t, and so on, help women build better lives. But measures targeted to reducing women’s poverty are critical too.

Government­s agreed to change economic policies to provide more opportunit­ies for women, improve laws to uphold economic rights, and boost access to credit. It is time to walk the talk.

While both men and women suffer in poverty, gender discrimina­tion means that women have far fewer resources to cope. They are likely to be the last to eat, the ones least likely to access healthcare, and routinely trapped in timeconsum­ing, unpaid domestic tasks. They have more limited options to work or build businesses. Adequate education may lie out of reach. Some end up forced into sexual exploitati­on as part of a basic struggle to survive.

Having discussed the many facets that relate to gender and inequality, it is only fair to argue that women are not poorer, it is just the system that is flawed which fails to avail opportunit­ies that make them realise their full potential. Poverty must not have a gender and the stereotype­s that synonimise poverty with feminity must fall.

The painful truth though, is that for now, poverty does bear a female face. — @andile_ tshuma

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe