UN report says women globally are increasingly gaining access to resources earned through income, social protection and asset ownership. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The findings, in the latest report by a UN agency, indicates women globally are increasingly gaining access to resources earned through income, social protection and asset ownership.
- Despite this progress married women still contribute less in support of family duties, report notes.
- Delaying marriage, the report observes, has enabled women to complete their education, gain a stronger foothold in the labour market and support themselves financially.
Women are contributing more in households due to increased
exposure to economic empowerment, cushioning their families from
financial hardships.
The findings, in the latest report
by a UN agency, indicates women globally are increasingly gaining
access to resources earned through income, social protection and asset
ownership.
The report by UN Women dubbed Progress of the World’s Women 2019-2020
says this has triggered some shifts in the balance of power in homes,
giving women greater economic security and weight in decision-making
processes.
The report says the increased economic might by women is also helping them cushion their families from financial hardship.
However, the report observes that despite this progress, married women still contribute less in support of family duties.
Motherhood Penalties
“Even
in developed countries where women’s gains have been more sweeping and
sustained, those who live with a male partner still generally contribute
less than half of the family income and accumulate an even smaller
share of its wealth,” reads the report.
‘Motherhood
penalties’ in the form of reduced employment rates and a pay-gap
between women with and without children are a persistent problem.
Further,
single mothers who lack income protection from a second earner, for
example, face a much higher risk of poverty compared to two-parent
families.
The report, however, also
recognises that while overall women’s access to economic resources has
improved, the distribution of unpaid care work remains largely unequal.
Compared
to men, women do three times as much unpaid care and domestic work
within families, with particularly stark inequalities in
developing-country contexts, where access to time-saving infrastructure
and public services is more limited.
On family size, the report notes that more women are voicing their concerns in reproductive matters such as childbearing.
“Women
are exercising greater agency and voice in decisions regarding whether
and when to have children, and how many. In practical terms, smaller
families can be less costly to maintain, and women’s care and domestic
work burden within them may be smaller.”
The
findings reveal that in some regions couples may be limiting the number
of children they have in response to economic conditions that make
childrearing financially challenging or because in the absence of
quality long-term care services, they also have older parents to care
for.
Women, the report says, may also
be choosing to have fewer children because men still do not do their
fair share of unpaid care and domestic work.
Choice of Marriage
All over the world, birth rates are declining, the report notes, although the pace of change varies across regions.
In
the past three decades, significant changes have occurred in whether,
when and with whom women and men form intimate partnerships.
Delaying
marriage, the report observes, has enabled women to complete their
education, gain a stronger foothold in the labour market and support
themselves financially.
Cohabitation
has also been on the rise with some regions registering an increasing
number of women opting out of marriage altogether.
“These
decisions can arise out of necessity as much as choice when the cost of
setting up a family for some couples is too high. It can also reflect
women’s growing reluctance to enter into partnerships in which they are
expected to take on a subordinate role,” the report says.
Rising
divorce rates, the report notes, has been one of the most visible
features of family change in most regions since the 1980s. The
liberalisation of divorce laws in some developed countries has led to
lower rates of suicide by women, a lower incidence of reported domestic
violence and fewer instances of women being murdered by their spouses.
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