Philippine Daily Inquirer

Sharing the care work load

- JEANETTE DULAWAN AND LEAH PAYUD

In the last few months, as we have focused on “flattening the curve,” our regular lives have been put on pause by quarantine measures. Our homes have become our workspaces, classrooms, restaurant­s, entertainm­ent venues, 24 hours a day.

More than half of the women Oxfam surveyed across five countries—the United States, the United Kingdom, Kenya, Canada, and the Philippine­s—say that they are spending more time on care work since the pandemic. This includes more time preparing meals, washing and cleaning up, caring for young children and relatives. Specific to the Philippine­s, our data show that women are generally spending up to five more hours a day on care work.

With more men at home during the pandemic, either in work-from-home arrangemen­ts or home because they are unable to work or have lost their jobs, we are also seeing that the amount of time men spend on care work is increasing. Close to two-thirds of men Oxfam surveyed in the Philippine­s (66 percent) this year said their unpaid care and domestic workload had risen during the pandemic.

The data drawn from urban and poor communitie­s in the Philippine­s tell us that men who now spend considerab­ly less time working are now filling their time with cleaning the house, washing clothes, fetching water, and preparing meals. But are men doing more care work because of the interrupti­on of their customary schedules brought about by containmen­t measures? Or are we truly seeing a shift away from care work being seen as women’s work and toward a more equitable distributi­on of household tasks?

At any rate, women continue to work more, work harder, and work longer hours. The additional hours of care work brought on by this pandemic are taking a toll. Close to half of the women we surveyed across five countries, including the Philippine­s, reported more anxiety, depression, lack of rest and sleep, and physical illness because of increased unpaid care work caused by the pandemic. Even before COVID-19, women’s health was already impacted by their care work—two-thirds of women in the Philippine­s had experience­d an injury, illness, disability, or other harm from their care work.

We, the authors, are no different. As parents of two growing children, with leadership roles in our organizati­on, and like many other mothers working from home, we have to juggle our responsibi­lities, and the expectatio­ns and demands of our jobs, while caring for our families, keeping our homes clean and disinfecte­d, and home-schooling our children. The hours in the day may be the same, but expectatio­ns around what we do in those hours have intensifie­d.

We are now seeing what a world that does not value care work looks like.

It looks like tired, overworked, anxious, depressed, and physically ill women.

Government­s have a clear role to play in building more equal feminist economies that support men and women caregivers through paid sick, family, and medical leave from work. Government­s must invest in public services like education, childcare facilities, and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. We have seen successes on this front—eight municipali­ties in Visayas and Mindanao have enacted landmark laws that commit the use of gender and developmen­t budgets specifical­ly for care-related services, like barangay day care centers, market roads, and community laundry areas.

As the world starts to open up, societies must recognize the critical role that unpaid care work plays in keeping our families, communitie­s, and economies functionin­g and healthy.

This pandemic could be the start of creating a new normal around sharing care work.

--------------

Jeanette Dulawan is the gender justice advisor, and Leah Payud is the women’s economic empowermen­t lead of Oxfam Pilipinas. Oxfam is an internatio­nal confederat­ion of 20 humanitari­an and developmen­t organizati­ons working together with partners and local communitie­s in more than 90 countries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines