Summary
- Nearly three times more women will lose their jobs compared to men as the effects of Covid-19 ravage industries across the world, a study by Citi has revealed.
- According to Citi’s report, of the 44 million employees that could ultimately lose their jobs, approximately 31 million will be women.
- An estimated 220 million women across the world are in sectors vulnerable to job losses due to Covid-19.
Nearly three times more women will lose their jobs compared to
men as the effects of Covid-19 ravage industries across the world, a
study by Citi has revealed.
According to Citi’s report,
of the 44 million employees that could ultimately lose their jobs,
approximately 31 million will be women. An estimated 220 million women
across the world are in sectors vulnerable to job losses due to
Covid-19.
“The difference has to do with the sectors
affected most by Covid-19. Women are over-represented in six sectors
that are the most vulnerable to Covid-19 layoffs. Women are also more
likely to be caretakers both of children and adult dependents and take
on more unpaid work than men,” says Citi.
“The retail,
professional and businesses services, financial services, education and
health, leisure and hospitality and government sectors, where women are
most likely to work, are the most likely to shed the greatest number of
women from payrolls.”
Citi indicates that generally,
women occupy 75 percent or more of the jobs in the personal care,
healthcare, and clerical professions and roughly 70 percent in the
education sector.
“The risk of unemployment in a post-Covid-19 world is higher for
females versus males, which could also lead to higher rates of poverty
for females,” says Citi.
In Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics’ Survey on Socio economic Impact of Covid-19 on Households
report, more than half (51.2 percent) of women respondents were
unemployed in the seven days preceding the survey. This is in comparison
to the 34.7 percent of men who were unemployed indicating that 65.5
percent of men were accounted for in the labour force.
“Almost half of the respondents who were absent from work
reported that it was due to lockout or stay-away instructions as guided
by the government and/or employers. Other reasons include temporary
slack, and temporary layoff or work reduction,” read the KNBS survey.
Some nine out of 10 of the people who reported that they were absent from work were unsure about when they would be returning.
“Meanwhile, lingering challenges that hampered female labour
force participation before the coronavirus may be further exacerbated by
the pandemic. Returning to work and/or seeking employment may be
inhibited as the responsibility of caring for family members stricken
with the virus, and/or caring for the roughly 1.5 billion children
subject to school closures may largely fall to women. Female job cuts in
six key sectors might slash $1 trillion from global gross domestic
product (GDP), or 1.2 percent from global growth,” read Citi’s report.
In
Kenya, latest data shows the number of people out of active labour
force increased by 5.1 percent (or 435,369 people) to 8.53 million in
the first quarter of this year, worsening the dependency ratio. In the
previous quarter, 8.09 million people were not in the active labour
force.
The number of Kenyans between the ages of 20 and
34 years, who are in employment or running a business, dropped 9.89
percent to 7.02 million.
This is expected to further
widen gender income parity in Kenya and globally. Pre-Covid-19, Kenya
had performed worse in the various categories of Gender Gap Index
including economic participation opportunity and education attainment.
According to Citi, to help mitigate job, and global GDP losses,
decision-makers must take women into account in policies intended to
address Covid-19 economic disruptions. Many policy prescriptions
pre-date the pandemic, and are even more unsuitable now.
The
strain in Kenyan households has also resulted in an increase in the
cases of sexual and domestic violence. With restricted movement and
curfews in place, there has been a rise in violence where women and
girls are the main victims.
In an article published in
the Daily Nation, data from the national gender helpline 1195 shows that
sexual violence, including defilement, physical assault, abduction and
neglect of children, as well psychological torture went up significantly
since the control measures were instituted.
There were a few men who reported being subjected to psychological torture and physical violence by their partners.
In April, for instance, 461 reports of sexual and gender-based
violence were made to the 24-hour hotline compared to 115 in March.
The
rise in violence fortifies Citi’s push for policies such as protection
of women from gender-based violence, pay equity, steering women towards
“frontier” and high-wage sectors and passing laws that prohibit
discrimination in employment, retirement benefits, taxation and pay.
Sectors
such as cloud computing, engineering, data and AI, product development
and sales which make up some of the frontier sectors have a low female
representation. This ranges from 12 percent, 15 percent, 26 percent, 35
percent and 37 percent respectively.
The larger
proportion of women is found in content production and people and
culture roles, which, are currently struggling under the pandemic.
No comments :
Post a Comment