New Straits Times

GENDER GAP WIDENING AGAIN

Global trend made U-turn, especially in workplaces, says WEF

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GENEVA

ADECADE of slow progress towards better parity between the sexes has screeched to a halt, the World Economic Forum (WEF) said yesterday, warning the global gender gap was now widening.

In recent years, women have made significan­t progress towards equality in a number of areas such as education and health, with the Nordic countries leading the fray.

But the global trend now seemed to have made a U-turn, especially in workplaces, where full gender equality was not expected to materialis­e until 2234, WEF said in a report.

“A decade of slow but steady progress on improving parity between the sexes came to a halt in 2017, with the global gender gap widening for the first time since the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report was first published in 2006,” it said.

The Geneva-based organisati­on’s annual report tracks the disparitie­s between the sexes in four areas: education, health, economic opportunit­y and political empowermen­t.

A year ago, WEF estimated that it would take 83 years to close the remaining gap.

But since then, women’s steady advances in the areas of education, health and political representa­tion have plateaued, and for the fourth year running, equality in the workplace has slipped further from view.

Yesterday’s report said that at the current rate of progress, it would now take a full 100 years on average to achieve overall gender equality.

The estimated time needed to ensure full equality in the workplace has jumped from 80 years in 2014 to 170 years last year, to 217 years now, according to the report.

“In 2017, we should not be seeing progress towards gender parity shift into reverse,” Saadia Zahidi, WEF head of education, gender and work, said in a statement.

Even more than in the workplace, political participat­ion stubbornly lagged behind, with women still accounting for just 23 per cent of the world’s decision makers, according to the report.

But political representa­tion was also the area where women had made the most advances in recent years, the report said, estimating it would take 99 years to fully rectify the situation. AFP

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