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Pay gap: Pay equality may take 70 years

Gap in market participation by women has decreased marginally
United Nations: It will take at least 70 more years to achieve pay equity between women and men, the ILO said on Sunday, noting that women earn on average 77 per cent of what men earn. On the occasion of International Women's day, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) said a gender pay gap persists, both for women with and without children.
“Are working women better off today than they were 20 years ago? The answer is a qualified yes. Has this progress met our expectations? The answer is a decidedly no.
We need to be innovative, to reframe the debate and to intensify the focus on ensuring the rights of women at work,” D.G. of the ILO, Guy Ryder said.
The ILO, United Nation's specialised agency noted that without targeted action, at the current rate, pay equality between women and men will not be achieved before 2086, or at least 71 years from now. Globally, the gap in labour market participation rates between men and women has decreased only marginally since 1995.
Currently, about 50 per cent of all women are working, compared to 77 per cent of men. In 1995, these figures were 52 per cent and 80 per cent respectively. It is estimated that reducing the gap in participation rates between men and women by 25 per cent in G20 countries by 2025 would add more than 100 million women to the labour force. Today women own and manage over 30 per cent of all businesses but tend to be concentrated in small enterprises.
On a more macro level, women sit on 19 per cent of board seats globally, and hold only five per cent of CEO positions at the world's largest companies, the agency said.
Further, it said access to maternity protection has improved, given that the percentage of countries offering 14 weeks or more maternity level has increased from 38 per cent to 51 per cent. However more than 800 million women workers globally, about 41 per cent of the female workforce worldwide, still do not have adequate maternity protection.
( Source : PTI )
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