India's gender gap stagnates, wage parity improves.
India
made no improvement in the overall gender gap ranking by the World
Economic Forum (WEF) in 2018, compared to 2017. It stood at a low
108 out of the 149 countries in 2018, the same as in 2017.
“India
maintains a stable ranking this year, but its gap is directionally
larger this year, with a 33 per cent gap yet to be bridged,” says
the report, titled Measuring the Global Gender Gap.
India
ranked lower on all segments - economic participation and
opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival ranking, and
political empowerment. “It (India) needs to make improvements
across the board, from women’s participation to getting more women
into senior and professional roles,” the WEF said.
The
country continues to rank third-lowest in the world on health and
survival. It remained the world’s least-improved country on this
sub-index over the past decade. In fact, its ranking slipped to 147
on this segment in 2018, from 141 in the previous year. Only two
countries were below India on this ranking — Armenia at 148 and
China at 149.
Neighbouring
Sri Lanka stood at the top position on the health and survival
category.
India’s ranking on political empowerment came down to 19
in 2018, from 15 in the previous year. The country has closed nearly
40 per cent of its gender gap on this sub-index. On political
empowerment, one country — Bangladesh — has reached a level of
gender parity of more than 50 per cent among South Asia. The region’s
remaining countries are yet to achieve a gender parity level of at
least 20 per cent.
It
is worth noting that, from a low base, South Asia has made the
fastest progress on closing its gender gap of any world region over
the past decade.
Meanwhile,
the country also recorded improvements in wage equality for similar
work, succeeds in fully closing its tertiary education gender
gap for the first time, and keeps primary and secondary education
gaps closed for the third year running.
Interestingly,
India has the second-largest artificial
intelligence (AI) workforce, but one of the largest AI gender
gaps, with only 22 per cent of roles filled by women.
According
to the report, the world has closed 68 per cent of its gender gap and
at the current rate of change, it will take 108 years to close the
overall gender gap and 202 years to bring about parity in the
workplace.
South
Asia was the second-lowest ranking region in the index, with only 65
per cent of its gender gap now closed. India is slightly ahead of the
regional average, having closed 66 per cent.
The
global list was topped by Iceland, having closed more than 85.8 per
cent of its overall gender gap. Iceland holds the top spot in the
index for the 10th consecutive year.
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