Gulf News

THE WASHING WORKING WOMEN OF INDIA

About 20 million women have drained from India’s workforce since 2004. Is the lack of safety responsibl­e for this?

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There are two things New Delhi marketing executive Khyati Malhotra never leaves home without: Her taser and a pepper spray. It’s just part of the investment she makes to stay safe in a country where crimes reported against women have surged more than 80 per cent in a decade and deadly cases of sexual violence often roil cities and villages. So a chunk of Malhotra’s salary goes into a car and driver to avoid the dangers of public transport, where women are cat-called, groped and assaulted.

In Bangalore, Vidya Laxman, an executive at a multinatio­nal in India, pays for a battalion of household help and security cameras to keep her children safe. Sajna Nair of Delhi figures she’s lost almost $200,000 (Dh734,500) in earnings after quitting a bank job because she couldn’t find safe childcare for her daughter.

In recent months, the rape, torture and murder of an eightyear-old girl in the state of Jammu, an 11-year-old in Gujarat and the rape of 16-yearold in Uttar Pradesh have laid bare how India treats its women and children. Lawmakers have said they will push for more stringent punishment­s to deter such crimes. Meanwhile, dozens of interviews reveal a less acknowledg­ed economic effect: Increasing­ly afraid for their own and their children’s safety, many women are simply leaving the workforce or taking lowerpayin­g jobs.

In the eight years from 2004, about 20 million women (the size of the combined population­s of New York, London and Paris) vanished from India’s workforce, the World Bank estimates.

“There’s no place where I could leave my child without worrying about safety,” said Indu Bhandari, who quit a lucrative corporate career to teach because of those worries. “Having been a target of sexual abuse as a child, I knew first-hand what I could be exposing my child to.”

Decisions like hers are a blow to foreign and local companies looking to hire more women in Asia’s third largest economy.

India could increase its GDP by $770 billion by 2025 by getting more women to work and increasing equality, according to McKinsey Global Institute. Yet, only 27 per cent of Indian women are in employment. That’s the lowest among the major emerging nations and G-20 countries, according to the publicatio­n IndiaSpend.

“If we are able to establish a safer environmen­t, definitely more women will step out for jobs, adding to the workforce,” said Anjali Verma, an economist at PhillipCap­ital in Mumbai. “In a decade, this may contribute to higher overall consumptio­n, savings, and economic growth.”

Girija Borker, a PhD candidate in economics at Brown University, in a study of more than 4,000 women at Delhi University, found female students willing to pay almost $300 more than men for a safer travel route because most faced some form of street harassment. “With the rapid urbanisati­on, India needs better policies for women’s safety,” Borker said.

In India, preference for male children has skewed the gender balance, leading to a whopping 37 million more men than women. Two-thirds of the country live in villages that follow feudal, caste and gender hierarchie­s. That means many women never make formal complaints when they are harassed, and perpetrato­rs often go unpunished. It also makes it hard to draw internatio­nal comparison­s.

Death for child rapists

Crimes against women surged 83 per cent from 2007 to 2016, government data show, resulting in 39 crimes every hour.

Public pressure forced lawmakers to recommend the death penalty for child rapists and they are debating a similar punishment for the rape of women. Many businesses are spending more on transport and other benefits to women. Yet filling all the gaps is hard. “In most advanced economies, there are social structures, better travel infrastruc­ture, better creches,” said Nanda Majumdar, who heads intellectu­al capital and profession­al developmen­t at law firm Nishith Desai Associates.

Nair said she could have invested earnings from her more lucrative financial career in the property or stock markets. She now runs a public relations business.

In New Delhi, Zeba, 25, is heartbroke­n after male family members refused to let her go to nursing school after a rape nearby. “Things would have been so different if I was a man,” said Zeba. “I would certainly have been richer.”

If we are able to establish a safer environmen­t, definitely more women will step out for jobs…. In a decade, this may contribute to higher overall consumptio­n, savings, and economic growth.” Anjali Verma | economist at Phillip Capital

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