Gender-based disparity worst in India when it comes to daily wagers.
Women
are paid the most unequally in India, compared to men, when it comes
to hourly wages for labour. On average, women are paid 34 per cent
less than men, a recent report by the International
Labour Organization (ILO) has found. This gap in wages, known as
the gender wage gap, is the highest among 73 countries studied in the
report.
The
trend holds true globally as well, but with lower levels of
inequality among the sexes, where on average, hourly wages of women
are 16 per cent less than those of men. Inequality is higher in
monthly wages, with a gap of 22 per cent.
Overall,
real wages grew just 1.8 per cent globally (136 countries) in 2017.
These
findings are presented in the flagship publication of the ILO, the
Global Wage Report 2018-19, which was released on November 26.
“In
most countries, women and men differ significantly in respect of
working time – specifically, that part-time work is more prevalent
among women than among men,” the report said.
With
empirical evidence that gender
wage gap is visible even with women with higher levels of
education, the report advocated that “emphasis needs to be placed
on ensuring equal pay for women and men”.
This
gender wage gap has remained unchanged at 20 per cent from 2016 to
2017. Women are paid higher hourly wages than men in Bangladesh.
But
in 2017, the gender gap was accompanied by a near-stagnation in
wages. Real wage growth has been the lowest since 2008, the year of
the financial crisis.
In
real terms (adjusted for price inflation), global wage growth
declined to 1.8 per cent in 2017, from 2.4 per cent in 2016. The
findings are based on the data from 136 countries.
In
advanced economies (G20), real wage growth declined from 0.9 per cent
in 2016 to 0.4 per cent in 2017, meaning near stagnation. By
contrast, in emerging economies and developing G20 countries, real
wage growth dipped marginally from 4.9 per cent in 2016 and 4.3 per
cent in 2017.
This
global stagnation in real wages comes in line with the global growth
forecast, which was revised lower by the International Monetary Fund
earlier.
The
slowdown in wages at the level of hourly labour wages is in stark
contrast with organised sector salaries.
Business
Standard had reported earlier that salaries in the organised sector
are rising faster than new job creation in the last few years.
The
earlier reports had noted that gender pay gap increases with the
average wage of enterprises: the higher the average wage, the wider
the gender pay gap. The gap among chief executive officers was found
to be about 40 per cent — twice as high as the overall gender pay
gap, which is about 20 per cent.
No comments:
Post a Comment