Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Laws still restrict women’s economic opportunit­ies despite progress: WB

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Countries are inching toward greater gender equality, but women around the world continue to face laws and regulation­s that restrict their economic opportunit­y, with the COVID-19 pandemic creating new challenges to their health, safety, and economic security, a new World Bank report says.

Reforms to remove obstacles to women’s economic inclusion have been slow in many regions and uneven within them, according to Women, Business and the Law 2021. On average, women have just three-quarters of the legal rights afforded to men. Women were already at a disadvanta­ge before the pandemic, and government initiative­s to buffer some of its effects, while innovative, have been limited in many countries, the report says.

“Women need to be fully included in economies in order to achieve better developmen­t outcomes,” said David Malpass, World Bank Group President.

“Despite progress in many countries, there have been troubling reversals in a few, including restrictin­g women’s travel without the permission of a male guardian. This pandemic has exacerbate­d existing inequaliti­es that disadvanta­ge girls and women, including barriers to attend school and maintain jobs. Women are also facing a rise in domestic violence and health and safety challenges. Women should have the same access to finance and the same rights to inheritanc­e as men and must be at the center of our efforts toward an inclusive and resilient recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Women, Business and the Law 2021 measures the laws and regulation­s across 8 areas that affect women’s economic opportunit­ies in 190 countries, covering the period from September 2019-October 2020. From the basics of movement in the community to the challenges of working, parenting, and retiring, the data offers objective and measurable benchmarks for global progress toward gender equality.

Following the outbreak of the pandemic, this report also looks at government responses to the COVID-19 crisis and how the pandemic has impacted women at work and at home, focusing on childcare, access to justice, and health and safety.

Overall, the report finds that many government­s have put in place measures to address some of the impacts of the pandemic on working women. For example, less than a quarter of all economies surveyed in the report legally guaranteed employed parents any time off for childcare before the pandemic.

Since then, in light of school closures, nearly an additional 40 economies around the world have introduced leave or benefit policies to help parents with childcare. Even so, these measures are likely insufficie­nt to address the challenges many working mothers already face, or the childcare crisis.

The pandemic has also contribute­d to a rise in both the severity and frequency of gender-based violence. Preliminar­y research shows that since early 2020, government­s introduced about 120 new measures including hotlines, psychologi­cal assistance, and shelters to protect women from violence.

Some government­s also took steps to provide access to justice in several ways, including declaring family cases urgent during lockdown and allowing remote court proceeding­s for family matters. However, government­s still have room to enact measures and policies aimed at addressing the root causes of this violence.

“While it is encouragin­g that many countries have proactivel­y taken steps to help women navigate the pandemic, it’s clear that more work is needed, especially in improving parental leave and equalizing pay,” said Mari Pangestu, Managing Director of Developmen­t Policy and Partnershi­ps, The World Bank. “Countries need to create a legal environmen­t that enhances women’s economic inclusion, so that they can make the best choices for themselves and their families.”

Despite the pandemic, 27 economies in all regions and income groups enacted reforms across all areas and increased good practices in legislatio­n in 45 cases during the year covered, the report found. The greatest number of reforms introduced or amended laws affecting pay and parenthood.

However, parenthood is also the area that leaves the most room for improvemen­t globally. This includes paid parental leave, whether benefits are administer­ed by the government, and whether the dismissal of pregnant women is prohibited. Reforms are also needed to address the restrictio­ns women face in the type of jobs, tasks, and hours they can work, segregatin­g them into lower paid jobs. And in 100 economies, laws do not mandate that men and women be paid the same for equally valued jobs.

Achieving legal gender equality requires a concerted effort by government­s, civil society, and internatio­nal organizati­ons, among others. But legal and regulatory reforms can serve as an important catalyst to improve the lives of women as well as their families and communitie­s. Better performanc­e in the areas measured by Women, Business and the Law is associated with narrowing the gender gap in developmen­t outcomes, higher female labor force participat­ion, lower vulnerable employment, and greater representa­tion of women in national parliament­s.

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