The Covid pandemic will change the world permanently in many ways. Most obviously, people will increasingly work from home. Workplaces will not disappear, but an increasing share of work will be done at home.
This will save employers office space and ancillary facilities. It will
save employees money, time, and hassle in commuting to work. It will slash the
need for meetings of every sort. More people will be available for part-time
work or piecework from home, boosting productivity.
In India, working from home could finally reverse the dramatic crash in
the female labour-force participation rate (FLPR). In rich countries, two
thirds of women above the age of 15 work, increasing incomes and living
standards. In every Asian miracle economy, a rising FLPR enabled GDP growth to
exceed 7%.
The one exception is India, where the FLPR has fallen from 33% in the
early 1990s to just 25% according to government data, and to as little as
11-12% according to surveys of the Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy.
The CMIE figure looks too bad to be true. Maybe Covid has made it even more
unsafe for women to leave home to work.
The FLPR crash means India’s overall labour participation rate, for men
and women, has been falling. This is the very opposite of the increase that a
demographic dividend was supposed to give India. The total participation rate
was around 50% a decade ago, but fell to 43% in 2019-20, fell further with
Covid, and has revived slightly to a still pathetic 41%. Male participation has
been more or less constant, but female participation has crashed, lowering the
national average.
Why so? One encouraging reason is that a greater proportion of girls in
the 15-25 age group are now in school and college instead of the fields. The
same is true of boys of 15-25 years. This is good for the long run, though the
quality of education must be upgraded.
But female participation has also fallen in every other age group from 25 to
65, above all in agriculture. In urban areas, the FLPR has always been among
the lowest in the world at around 16%. It has shrunk a bit despite rising
female education. The boom in college-going girls has not translated into a
boom in urban jobs for females.
Deep social reasons explain this. A global map displaying female
participation will show that by far the lowest rates lie in a mostly Muslim
belt stretching from Morocco across north Africa and the Middle East to north
India. The Islamic culture that discourages female education, employment and
outside work has affected north Indian Hindu culture too. I have seen
microfinance groups in UP where every woman covered her face with her pallu,
very unlike the open faces you see in Kerala or Tamil Nadu.
In north India, women are considered fair prey for men if they roam
outside their houses, especially at late hours. They are not supposed to
complain of molestation for fear of “badnami”, a slur on their reputation. In
rural India, women (especially Dalits) transplant rice and harvest crops in
groups and feel reasonably safe. But farm mechanisation has slashed such work.
Once, poor families perforce sent women to work to earn cash. But now
with falling poverty, rising wages and remittances from urban relatives, many
rural families keep their young women at home as a status symbol. Chandra Bhan
Prasad, a Dalit scholar, says that families whose girls work in the fields get
only low-quality sons-in-law, so keeping women at home improves both status and
marriage-related prosperity. Thus, the social roots of low female participation
run very deep and cannot easily be removed.
What might just change this culture is the ability to work from home.
Zoom, Google groups and other tele-conferencing facilities now mean that women
can work from home on par with men, with no social stigma or lack of safety.
They do not have to leave home and face molestation or “badnami.” Zoom slashes
commuting time and can make it feasible for women to do both office and family
chores. Besides, working from home can provide enough income to hire domestic
help
Obsolete laws had earlier made it difficult for IT firms to get the
telecom clearances needed for creating efficient network working from home.
Luckily, those rules were suspended because of Covid and should be abolished
permanently. Women now outnumber men in colleges, and this needs reflection in
urban hiring. The government should consider subsidising companies hiring women
to work from home, since this increases the demographic dividend and helps
society overall. We must change the terrible culture that keeps women at home,
out of the workforce.
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