This issue of the Global Employment Trends for Women looks at the
gender aspects of the impact of the financial crisis and slowdown
in world economic growth on jobs, and updates indicators on the situation
of women in labour markets around the world.
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Overview
The Global Employment Trends 2009 examined the most current information
available in order to assess the impact of the financial crisis and
slowdown in world economic growth on jobs and what we could expect
from several possible scenarios for the way the situation might evolve
in the year ahead.
This issue of the Global Employment Trends for Women looks at the
gender aspects of this impact, and updates indicators on the situation
of women in labour markets around the world.
This report reconfirms that gender inequality remains an issue within
labour markets globally. Women suffer multiple disadvantages in terms
of access to labour markets, and often do not have the same level
of freedom as men to choose to work. Gender differences in labour
force participation rates and unemployment rates are a persistent
feature of global labour markets. In 2008, an estimated 6.3 per cent
of the worlds female labour force was not working but looking
for work, up from 6.0 per cent in 2007, while the corresponding rate
for males was 5.9 per cent in 2008, up from 5.5 per cent in 2007.
Women also face constraints in terms of sectors of economic activity
in which they would like to work and working conditions to which they
aspire. Women are overrepresented in the agricultural sector, and
if the more industrialized regions are excluded, almost half of female
employment can be found in this sector alone. Women are also often
in a disadvantaged position in terms of the share of vulnerable employment
(i.e. unpaid family workers and own-account workers) in total employment.
These workers are most likely to be characterized by insecure employment,
low earnings and low productivity.
Those women who are able to secure the relative comfort of wage and
salaried employment are often not receiving the same remuneration
as their male counterparts. Gender wage differentials may be due to
a variety of factors, including crowding of women in low paying industries
and differences in skills and work experience, but may also be the
result of discrimination. Given the constraints women are facing,
promoting gender equality and empowering women is not only an important
goal of the Millennium Declaration in itself,1 it is also pivotal
to achieving the new target on full and productive employment and
decent work for all, and virtually all remaining goals and targets.
By the end of 2008, working poverty, vulnerable employment and unemployment
were beginning to rise as the effects of the economic slowdown spread.
With the deepening of the recession in 2009, the global jobs crisis
is expected to worsen sharply. Furthermore, we can expect that for
many of those who manage to keep a job, earnings and other conditions
of employment will deteriorate. The impact of the crisis will be felt
by both men and women, but not necessarily in the same manner. This
report presents alternative scenarios for selected labour market indicators
in 2008 and 2009 in order to illustrate the effect on gender differentials
in labour markets on the basis of changes in the economic environment.
A distinction should be made between the continued disadvantaged
position of women in global labour markets, and the immediate impact
of the current economic crisis. In developed economies, there are
signals that the crisis may be at least as detrimental for men as
for women, and possibly more so. This is suggested by the stronger
increase of the unemployment rate in developed economies for men compared
to women in 2008 (1.1 percentage points for men versus 0.8 points
for women). This report highlights some factors at the country level
that influence the gender impact in developed economies, as well as
the variation in country experiences.
Access to full and productive employment and decent work is crucial
for all, and decent work deficits are the primary cause of poverty
and social instability. The trends summarized in this report are therefore
extremely worrying for both women and men, and serve to highlight
the continued importance of an internationally coordinated effort
to stop the slowdown and start the global economy onto a much more
sustainable path.
This issue of Global Employment Trends for Women starts with an analysis
of recent labour market developments based on currently available
information (Section 2; see Annex 1 for tables referred to in this
report; Annex 2 for scenarios; Annex 3 for regional figures and groupings
of economies; and Annex 4 for a note on the methodology used to produce
world and regional estimates). Section 3 looks at the gender impact
of the economic crisis in developed economies, followed by the projection
of labour market indicators for 2008 and 2009 in Section 4 (see Annex
5 for methodological details). A final Section 5 concludes, and highlights
a number of policy considerations.