Gulf News

It’s time to harness angry feminist energy

After an unpreceden­ted show of protests, one should re-focus on welfare system and universal basic income through a feminist prism

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hen women turned out in record numbers to protest the ascension of United States President Donald Trump, many marchers raised wider issues about the lack of progress to real equality. The Sydney march was bigger than anything else I’ve seen for many years and, like the others, was diverse, including many men and children, not just the usual suspects.

The discontent with mainstream macho/materialis­t market models was evident in many speakers and banners, so 2017 may be the year for some serious feminist policy input into making societies more civil and equitable.

But how to harness the angry energy to influence change? A possible starting point is to address the mess of our current welfare policies through a feminist lens. Women are the majority of welfare payment recipients. Yet the current system has many major problems that neither major party in the US has addressed as illustrate­d by the unfair debt issues of Centrelink.

The current debacle demonstrat­es the unacceptab­ly high financial and social costs of tested, targeted welfare payments, and a very bureaucrat­ised, administra­tively expensive and socially damaging welfare system. A radical restructur­e is long overdue. At the same time, there is an increasing internatio­nal interest in a universal basic income (UBI) model for unconditio­nal payments.

A UBI could increase recognitio­n of social well-being and increase cohesion by recognisin­g the value of time used in unpaid work contributi­ons. As the demand for paid workers is expected to decrease, via both technology and new environmen­tal limits, this would be useful. Given the gender income difference­s already in place, from a feminist viewpoint, a UBI would adjust most existing gender-based income differenti­als.

Time-use studies show clearly differing gender balancing of time “choices”, as women retain most domestic and care roles. A Workplace Gender Equality Agency report shows the difference between the time Australian women and men spend on unpaid care work: 64.4 per cent of their average weekly work compared to 36.1 per cent for men.

Women’s time on unpaid care averages out to 139 minutes a day and obviously affects their access to paid work. This has not been part of most public debates on this issue, as the focus has been primarily on the effects on earned income of paid workers.

Conservati­ves oppose these changes, warn of reductions in paid work due to sloth and believe that humans are just self-interested and venal. The more progressiv­e view should be to recognise the positive benefits of funding current and additional unpaid contributi­ons.

Care and parenting

This type of payment reform would allow recipients to make real choices about how to allocate their time between paid and unpaid activities. Raising the status of care and parenting, as well as other community contributi­ons, should address wider inequities.

As this is partly unknown policy territory, the commonweal­th should consider piloting the UBI in the Northern Territory as it has been the site of an eight years-plus expensive trial of the BasicsCard. This would create interestin­g comparison­s as a non means-tested UBI is the polar opposite to BasicsCard, which controls access to benefits for Indigenous Australian­s.

Rather than risking extended bad outcomes by adopting the cashless welfare card model, government could use the NT plus other trial sites to develop a serious research model that would offer an evidence-based model that could create social well-being and more civil societies. The payment of income that is not paid work related would be a serious radical change with many gender advantages.

According to the WGEA paper, the monetary value of unpaid care work in Australia has been estimated to be $650.1 billion (Dh2.39 trillion) — the equivalent to 50.6 per cent of Australia’s gross domestic product (GDP).

However, unpaid care work is not included in the calculatio­n of the GDP. Aside from devaluing care work and thereby reinforcin­g gender inequity, there is also a tendency to obscure and ignore the many other unpaid contributi­ons people make via community activities, sport, culture and creativity, let alone time for good social relationsh­ips.

Other groupings like local sustainabl­e cooperativ­es, creative ventures offer examples of how many people could benefit by re-allocating their time across paid and unpaid tasks. A pilot would show what benefits occur if people are financiall­y okay and free of complex, time-consuming and degrading demands to satisfy administra­tive procedures. We need to be bold in seeking out possibilit­ies and a gender lens can be very useful. Eva Cox has been an academic, political adviser, public servant and runs a small research and policy consultanc­y.

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