Deccan Chronicle

Female poverty rate in S. Asia to rise due to Covid: UN

87 per cent of the world’s extreme poor live in Central and Southern Asia, sub-Saharan Africa

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United Nations, Sept. 3: The female poverty rate in South Asia will increase in

2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and more women than men in the 25-34 age group will be poorer in the next decade, according to new data released by the UN. The UN Women and the UN Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) said that the Covid-19 pandemic will disproport­ionately affect women and push 47 million more women and girls into extreme poverty by

2021, reversing decades of progress to lift this demographi­c above the poverty line. The report, ‘From

Insights to Action: Gender Equality in the wake of Covid-19’, said that the gender poverty gap will worsen further still in South Asia.

Central and Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, home to 87 per cent of the world’s extreme poor, will see the largest increases in extreme poverty, with an additional 54 million and 24 million people, respective­ly, living below the internatio­nal poverty line as a result of the pandemic. “The expected rise of poverty in South Asia as a result of the economic fallout of the pandemic showcases the vulnerabil­ity of women and girls living in households that have only recently been able to escape poverty, the report released on Wednesday said.

The pre-pandemic female poverty rate in South Asia was projected to be 10 per cent in 2021 but is now expected to reach 13 per cent. “Moreover, before the pandemic, projection­s for the region suggested that by 2030 only 15.8 per cent of the world’s poor women and girls would be living in South Asia. The revised projection­s now put that figure at 18.6 per cent,” the report said.

The report pointed out that the resurgence of poverty due to the pandemic threatens to deepen gender poverty gaps, especially for people aged 25 to 34, which is a key productive and family formation period for both women and men. In 2021, it is expected there will be 118 women in poverty for every 100 poor men globally, and this ratio could rise to 121 poor women for every 100 poor men by 2030.

While sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia will be the most impacted, “significan­tly more women than men in South Asia will be affected. In the 25-34 age group, there will be 118 poor women for every 100 poor men in South Asia, and that ratio will increase to 129 women for every 100 men by 2030. Globally, the poverty rate for women was expected to decrease by 2.7 per cent between

2019 and 2021, but projection­s now point to an increase of 9.1 per cent due to the pandemic and its fallout. The “pandemic will push 96 million people into extreme poverty by

2021, 47 million of whom are women and girls. This will increase the total number of women and girls living in extreme poverty to 435 million, with projection­s showing that this number will not revert to pre-pandemic levels until 2030,” the UN agencies said.

“The increases in women’s extreme poverty are a stark indictment of deep flaws in the ways we have constructe­d our societies and economies,” UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said. “We know that women take most of the responsibi­lity for caring for the family; they earn less, save less and hold much less secure jobs — in fact, overall, women’s employment is 19 per cent more at risk than men’s.”

Mlambo-Ngcuka said that the evidence of multiple inequaliti­es is critical to drive swift, restorativ­e policy action that puts women at the heart of pandemic recovery. While the pandemic has posed a serious threat to the prospects of eradicatin­g extreme poverty by the end of this decade, the reality is even grimmer as these projection­s of increased poverty rates for women and girls only account for the downward revision of GDP.

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