Care Work and Care Jobs for the future of decent work
भर
The report Care Work and Care Jobs for the future of decent work was published in 2018 by the International Labour Organisation. The report examines the scope, characteristics, and the intersectional disparities of both paid and unpaid care work. It examines the care economy as a way to support women’s equal opportunities as well as a sector with growing employment opportunities. It discusses the future of care work in terms of laws and policy discussions.
The report states that care work consists of two activities: “direct, personal and relational care activities” like feeding a baby and “indirect care work” such as cooking and cleaning. Both of these include for paid and unpaid labour. Nurses, teachers, domestic workers are some who are part of the care workforce. The report reveals that women perform 76.2 per cent of the total amount of unpaid care work across the world – this is 3.2 times more hours spent on such activities than men.
This 526-page document is divided into six chapters: Care Work and Care Jobs: What they are and why they matter (Chapter 1); Unpaid care work and gender inequalities at work (Chapter 2); Care policies and unpaid care work (Chapter 3); Care workers and care employment (Chapter 4); Care jobs for a better future of work (Chapter 5); A high road to care for the future of decent work (Chapter 6).-
In 2018, just 41 million men declared themselves unavailable for employment owing to unpaid caregiving they must impart. In the same year, 606 million women of working age declared themselves unavailable for employment for the same reason.
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One of the primary barriers preventing women from advancing into better-paying careers is unpaid care duties. Compared to men and women with no children, women with children under six years of age work shorter hours for money or profit. In addition, women who provide care are more likely to be self-employed or work in the informal economy.
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The report states that in Asia and the Pacific, men perform the lowest share of unpaid care work of all regions – an average of 1 hour and 4 minutes per day. In India, men spend only 31 minutes per day in unpaid care work.
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Regardless of the type of household, the probability of non-single women and men entering the labour force is lower in low-income countries. Married or partnered women in low-income countries suffer a “marriage penalty”, the report states, that results in a fall of 13.1 percentage points in the probability them either being in employment or seeking a job.
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The ILO-Gallup survey also finds that for women around the world, balancing work and family is their biggest workplace issue. Work-family balance and a lack of accessible care were consistently cited by both women and men as the top two challenges faced by working women.
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The report states that “care-related infrastructure” reduces the workload related to the household and family care which is primarily borne by women and girls. This includes tasks such as obtaining water and procuring sources for fire. The report observes that there are drastic regional differences in the availability of electricity as well as basic water and sanitation facilities. Northern America, Europe, and Central Asia have the lowest rates of access deficit, the report states.
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The report notes that care workers are subjected to low pay. A “care pay penalty” – discrepancy in hourly compensation that cannot be explained by variations in skills, experience, or credentials – has been noted in a number of situations. This care pay penalty, the report adds, stems from the lack of recognition of unpaid care work which also extends to the undervaluation of paid care work.
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Given the current patterns of employment segregation, the International Trade Union Confederation, Belgium, estimates that a direct public investment in the care economy of two per cent of GDP in just seven high-income countries would generate over 21 million jobs. As high as 75-85 per cent of these jobs would go to women. A similar investment in the emerging economies might result in the creation of 24 million new jobs in China, 11 million in India, 4.2 million in Brazil, over 2.8 million in Indonesia, and just over 400,000 in South Africa, with about 43-74 per cent of these new jobs going to women.
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Nearly 60 per cent of the mothers with newborns do not receive any maternity benefit, and just 42 per cent of countries worldwide currently meet ILO standards for maternity leave period, benefit level and source of benefit.
Focus and factoids by Ashish Singh.
PARI Library’s health archive project is part of an initiative supported by the Azim Premji University to develop a free-access repository of health-related reports relevant to rural India.
वस्तुस्थिती
लेखक
International Labour Organisation (ILO)
स्वामित्व हक्क
International Labour Organisation (ILO)
प्रकाशनाची तारीख
2018