Economic crisis could lead to more unemployed women
The economic crisis is expected to increase the number of unemployed
women by up to 22 million in 2009, the International Labour Office (ILO)
stated in its annual Global Employment Trends for Women report (GET),
released on Friday, adding that the global jobs crisis is expected to
worsen sharply with the deepening of the recession in 2009.
Creative solutions
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Of the 3 billion people employed
around the world in 2008, 1.2 billion were women (40.4 per
cent). |
At the same time, the ILO also said that the global economic crisis
would place new hurdles in the path toward sustainable and socially
equitable growth making decent work for women increasingly more
difficult, and called for "creative solutions" to address the gender
gap.
The ILO issued the Global Employment Trends for Women in the run up
to this year's annual International Women's Day, which is to be marked
on 6 March at the ILO in Geneva.
The Global Employment Trends report indicates that of the 3 billion
people employed around the world in 2008, 1.2 billion were women (40.4
per cent).
It said that in 2009, the global unemployment rate for women could
reach 7.4 per cent, compared to 7.0 per cent for men.
Gender impact
The report says that the gender impact of the economic crisis in
terms of unemployment rates is expected to be more detrimental for
females than for males in most regions of the world and most clearly in
Latin America and the Caribbean.
It adds that the only regions where unemployment rates are expected
to be less detrimental for women are East Asia, the developed economies
and the non- EU South Eastern Europe and CIS which had narrower gender
gaps in terms of job opportunities prior to the current economic crisis.
The labour market projections for 2009 show deterioration in global
labour markets for both women and men.
The ILO projects that the global unemployment rate could reach
between 6.3 per cent and 7.1 per cent, with a corresponding female
unemployment rate ranging from 6.5 to 7.4 per cent (compared to 6.1 per
cent to 7.0 per cent for men).
This would result in an increase of between 24 million and 52 million
people unemployed worldwide, of which from 10 million to 22 million
would be women.
At the same time, the ILO also projects that the global vulnerable
employment rate would range from 50.5 to 54.7 per cent for women in
2009, and 47.2 and 51.8 per cent for men, indicating that while the
burden of vulnerability is still greater for women, the crisis is
pushing more men into vulnerable employment compared to 2007.
ILO News
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