The principle of gender equality as enshrined in the Indian
constitution. The framework of Indian laws, development policies, plans and
programs too, are aimed at women’s advancement and equality. India, also a
signatory to the Millennium Declaration adopted at the United Nations General
Assembly in September 2000, has reaffirmed its commitment towards promoting gender
parity.
Women constitute nearly half of the country’s 1.25 billion
people and gender equality — whether in politics, economics, education or
health — is still a distant dream for most. This fact was driven home again
sharply by the recently released United National Development Programme’s Human
Development Report (HDR) 2015 which ranks India at a lowly 130 out of 155
countries in the Gender Inequality Index (GII). India trails behind most Asian
countries, including lesser developed Bangladesh and Pakistan which rank 111
and 121 respectively, and fares not much ahead of war-ravaged Afghanistan at
152. The GII reflects gender-based inequalities on three vital parameters:
reproductive health, empowerment, and economic activity. India’s record, dismal
on all three counts, is especially disquieting when it comes to representation
of women in Parliament. Just 12.2 per cent of parliamentary seats in the
world’s largest democracy are held by women as against 19.7 in Pakistan, 20 in
Bangladesh and 27.6 percent in Afghanistan. Even some of the poorest nations —
such as Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Uganda, Mozambique — are way ahead by
having over a third to half of their parliament seats occupied by women.
Health remains a niggling worry as well with Indian women’s
maternal mortality rate (MMR) being one of the world’s highest. The country
witnesses 190 deaths per 100,000 live births as compared to 170
pregnancy-related deaths per 100,000 births in both Bangladesh and Pakistan,
states the HDR. Even in terms of the percentage of women receiving secondary
education, Bangladesh at 34 per cent outsmarts India at 27 per cent.
On labour force the benefits of India becoming a 2-trillion
dollar economy, Asia’s third largest, have also not percolated down to its
women, point out economists. On the contrary, Indian women’s workforce
participation has plummeted from 35 per cent in 1990 to 27 per cent in 2013. According
to a 2012 report on global employment trends by the International Labour
Organisation, many Indian women are able to find only marginal work in the
informal economy, with low wages and little or no job security. Well-qualified
young urban women too, admit to having limited job options. Though over 60 per
cent of urban females are a part of the informal sector, unemployment among
those with graduate degrees and above qualifications continues to be a high 15.7
per cent, states the report. Even educated urban women are unable to find
opportunities that fit their profiles. Close to 20 per cent of urban females
work as domestic help, cleaners, vendors, hawkers and salespeople. Nearly 43
per cent of urban women were self-employed and the same proportion of women had
regular wage salaried jobs, according to the National Sample Survey
Organisation 2011. Nearly 46 per cent of urban women with regular wages have no
social security or employment benefits, while 58 per cent have no written
contract for their jobs.
Activists say India’s low GII scores are hardly surprising
given the country’s fierce resistance to change and entrenched patriarchal
mindsets. “We’ve been featuring at the bottom of the gender equity pyramid for
years. So what’s new?” Dr. Ranjana Kumari, Director, Center for Social
Research, a New Delhi-based non-profit, told IPS. “Though the gender agenda has
higher visibility in India now, that positive momentum hasn’t really translated
into higher investment for women in different sectors due to continued
discrimination and ineffectual laws and policies.” Kumari points out that one
of the most pivotal instrument of change — the Women’s Reservation Bill, which
seeks to grant 33 per cent of the Parliament’s seats to women — has still not
been passed by the upper house (Rajya Sabha) despite being cleared by the lower
house (Lok Sabha) in 2010. “The non-passage of the Bill due to splintered views
of different political parties has severely inhibited women’s participation in
politics. Until this basic requirement is addressed, Indian women can’t truly
be empowered,” observed the activist.
National and regional Indian parties continue to follow the
policy of exclusion while allotting seats to women. The common perception is
that they lack the ‘win-ability’ factor. Those who manage to win elections have
to work doubly hard to prove themselves as compared to the men,” one senior
woman politician told IPS.
Recommended Reading: NOT A WOMEN QUESTION, BUT A CLASS QUESTION
World Socialism Party
(India)
Email:
wspindia@hotmail.com
“That as in the order
of social evolution the working class is the last class to achieve its freedom,
the emancipation of the working class will involve the emancipation of all
mankind without distinction of race or
sex.”
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