Where are all the women?

30 March 2022 05:26 am Views - 814

Only 36 per cent of Sri Lankan women are willing & able to engage in paid employment, a new UN study finds

Women queue outside an outlet retailing LP gas in Colombo

 

A new study by the United Nations Organisation’s arm UN Women found that Sri Lankan women are denied equal access to the job markets, not just because of family or social factors, but also by employers.  
The report titled Gender Disparities and Labour Market Challenges: The Demand for Women Workers in Sri Lanka is the first of its kind in Sri Lanka to illustrate the largely unexplored factors on the part of employers and firms that prevent women from entering the paid workforce.  


In 2019, only 36 per cent of Sri Lankan women of working age were willing and able to engage in paid employment. While supply-side analyses have identified unpaid care work, skills deficits, and socio-cultural factors such as gender norms and stereotypes as underlying factors that hinder women from engaging in the formal labour force, this report meets a significant gap in our understanding of the demand-side barriers erected by employers.  
New analysis from the report shows that:


a) Gender-based occupational segregation powerfully conditions the demand by employers for low-skilled women workers, partly because women are paid less than men;  
b) Employers who are legally constrained from offering flexible working hours and night work for women, and those who could not finance maternity benefits, hired relatively fewer women;  
c) Employers who had set ideas about the kind of jobs women can and cannot do, also hired fewer women;  
d) Women workers in middle-level occupations are perceived as having the highest skills deficits, especially in English language skills, and in their ability to learn and solve problems;  
e) Three-fourths of male respondents were unconsciously prejudiced against women workers and were less likely to hire women;  
f) Employers were willing to hire women with disabilities but are constrained by a lack of experience and opportunities for training them.  


The findings also revealed, that unlike in other emerging economies, export orientation in Sri Lanka was not associated with an increased demand for women workers, reflecting the weak export orientation of the economy in recent times. 


Businesses also seemed to lag in the application of digital technology in business operations to re-skill workers. This was most evident when employees were constrained by limited access to IT-related systems and lacked the experience and resources to work from home during the pandemic. This digital divide is a major constraint for women’s engagement in upcoming industries with the potential to offer increased job opportunities.
Speaking at the launch, Hanaa Singer-Hamdy, Resident Coordinator of the UN in Sri Lanka said that the implications of low workforce participation for women and the economy at large were serious.  


“This is why this new research report is vital and needs to be considered in long-term economic policymaking. It provides us with a roadmap on which government and corporate policies are critical to support women’s full engagement in the labour force,” she said.  
Ramaaya Salgado, UN Women Sri Lanka’s Country Focal Point added that creating conditions for decent work and protecting employees from discrimination are basic human rights.  


“Women’s ability to participate equally in existing labour markets and their ability to meaningfully participate in economic decision-making at all levels is central to realizing women’s rights and gender equality. We hope that the policy directions laid out in this study [outlined below] will serve as a guide for the government, the private sector and non-governmental organizations in taking action to increase women’s participation in the paid workforce,” she said.  


During the launch, the study was officially presented to Chairperson of the Women Parliamentarians’ Caucus State Minister Dr Sudharshini Fernandopulle, and Kumari Jayasekera, State Secretary of the State Ministry of Women and Child Development.  
The launch was followed by a panel discussion with key officials from the government, civil society and the private sector.  
Highlighting the need to fulfill the promise of the 2030 Agenda, Kumari Jayasekera highlighted that the gravity of this subject was high.  


“We welcome all stakeholders to work in an integrated approach. Increasing the demand for women workers requires a concerted, coordinated effort by the Government, the private sector, and the non-Government sector involving a process of raising awareness, engaging in policy dialogue and formulation, designing strategic interventions, and implementing and monitoring these interventions.”  
To ensure that women have the choice to work for pay without discrimination or bias, UN Women is calling for better policy, action, and investment in Sri Lanka’s formal enterprises. 


This includes the formulation of macroeconomic, industrial and trade policies to diversify and upgrade productive structures, promote productive efficiency, and catalyse export-led economic growth, in order to help create jobs for women, especially in small economies like Sri Lanka. Further, in light of the ongoing pandemic, it is recommended to promote digitization, automation and work-from-home arrangements, which will also help upgrade production processes.  


The policy recommendations also highlight the importance of training women in middle-level occupational skills, especially in English language skills. Supportive interventions are also required to train women with disabilities to make employers more confident about hiring them. Promoting small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), female entrepreneurship, ownership, and management is also highlighted as SMEs generate more demand for women workers.  


Lastly, an emphasis on the need to reform labour laws to facilitate flexible working hours and night work for women and setting up a social fund for maternity benefits is also recommended. Encouraging family-friendly workplace policies that support the retention of women employees even after marriage will ensure that more women can enter the paid workforce.