Mint Hyderabad

Women must win if the whole world is to emerge victorious

Right now, no country grants women the same legal rights as men

- INDERMIT GILL & TEA TRUMBIC

are, respective­ly, chief economist and senior vice-president for developmen­t economics at the World Bank; and leader of the World Bank’s Women, Business and the Law project.

In May 1988, Alejandra Arévalo became the first female geologist to enter an undergroun­d mine in Chile. In doing so, she defied a popular myth: that a woman brings bad luck by venturing into a mine. She also broke the law. At the time, Chilean women were forbidden to work in undergroun­d mining or in any other job that “exceeded their strength or put at risk their physical or moral condition.” Arévalo’s defiance helped spark a revolution. By 1993, the restrictio­ns on women in mining had been abolished; and by 2022, women represente­d 15% of the Chilean mining workforce, a threefold increase since 2007.

Progress has occurred worldwide over the past half-century. Globally, women’s legal rights have improved by about twothirds, on average, since 1970. Major reforms have dismantled a wide array of barriers that women face, especially in the workplace and parenthood. Yet, it’s clear that there is still a huge global gender gap.

Data shows that the gap is much wider than thought. When legal difference­s regarding protection­s against violence and access to childcare are considered, women enjoy just two-thirds of the legal rights that men do—not 77%, as was previously believed. The World Bank’s latest Women, Business and the Law report says that no country in the world grants women the same legal rights as men.

The greatest deficiency involves safety: women enjoy barely one-third of the necessary legal protection­s against domestic violence, sexual harassment and femicide. Inadequate access to childcare services is another hindrance. Only 62 economies have establishe­d quality standards governing childcare services. As a result, women across 128 economies may have to think twice about going to work while they have children in their care.

Moreover, the gender gap is wider than laws on the books might suggest. For the first time, Women, Business and the Law compared progress in legal reforms with actual outcomes for women in 190 economies and found a delay in implementa­tion. Although laws on the books imply that women enjoy roughly two-thirds the rights of men, countries on average have establishe­d less than 40% of the systems needed for full implementa­tion. For example, 98 economies have enacted legislatio­n mandating equal pay for women for work of equal value; but only 35 economies (fewer than one-fifth) have pay-transparen­cy measures or enforcemen­t mechanisms to address pay gaps. That represents a colossal waste of human capital, and at a time we cannot afford. Today, fewer than half the world’s women participat­e in the labour force. By contrast, roughly three-fourths of all men do.

Closing that gap may help double global economic growth in the coming decade. The evidence is clear: economies with higher score on the Women, Business and the Law report tend to have larger female labour-force participat­ion rates, stronger female entreprene­urship and more active female participat­ion in political institutio­ns. Gender equality, in short, is both a fundamenta­l human right and a powerful engine of economic developmen­t.

Again, it is not enough merely to pursue equality in the laws on the books. We need comprehens­ive policies and institutio­ns— as well as a transforma­tion of cultural and social norms in several countries—to empower women to become successful workers, entreprene­urs and leaders. That means stronger enforcemen­t mechanisms to tackle workplace violence, practical provisions for childcare services and easier access to health-care services for women who survive violence.

Such policies enable women to remain employed without suffering career setbacks, help close the gender wage gap, and reconfigur­e gender roles and attitudes related to workplace and household duties. And as more women rise to leadership positions, they inspire new generation­s of girls to achieve their full potential.

Positive outcomes take time, but they do happen. As Claudia Goldin, the winner of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Economics, has observed, the 1960s surge in US women rising to high-level jobs did not happen by accident. It was the product of a slow but steady accretion of legal rights. “Even if the laws didn’t change women’s earnings, it made their lives better and expanded their options,” Goldin noted. “Workplaces became safer for them. They were no longer barred or excused from juries because of their presumed household responsibi­lities. They could not be fired when pregnant and could not be refused a job because they had children. They received better education and more resources, even as girls.”

Levelling the field presents economic opportunit­ies—and not just for women. When half of humanity wins, the whole world wins.

 ?? AFP ?? Nobel winner Claudia Goldin’s work shows the importance of legal rights
AFP Nobel winner Claudia Goldin’s work shows the importance of legal rights
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