0.2008
7667766266
x

Care Ecosystem

iasparliament Logo
August 30, 2024

Why in news?

Recently, the need for addressing low female labour force participation rate (LFPR) through care economy has been highlighted.

What is Care Ecosystem?

  • Care economy – It comprises of care work, both paid and unpaid, and direct and indirect care, provided within and outside the household.
  • Direct Care – These are personal, and relational care activities, such as feeding a baby.
  • Indirect care – It include activities like cooking and cleaning.
  • Unpaid care – These are caring work without monetary compensation.
    • For example, nursing an ill partner or cooking for a family member.
  • Paid care — It includes those works for exchange of some form of remuneration.
    • For example, services offered by domestic workers.
  • Care workers are hired directly by families or through placement agencies, nursing bureaus, hospitals, home healthcare companies, and not-for-profit organisations, among others.

                                     CareEconomy

Why care economy is important?

  • Protecting depending population – It helps in addressing the demand for childcare and care for the elderly increasing in all regions.
  • Addressing demographic change - India's demographic landscape is expected to change between 2020 to 2050, necessitating more elderly care.

                   ElderlyCare

  • Facilitating for demand - The demand for external support in the form of hired caregivers is rising in urban and peri-urban areas.
  • Meeting changing societal structure - As India’s economy undergoes rapid transformation, our society is also increasingly urbanizing and nuclearizing at an unprecedented rate.
  • People are moving from villages to cities and the joint family structure is being replaced by smaller nuclear entities.
  • Higher economic potential – Investments in establishing care infrastructure and care services can unlock economic potential for India’s economy
  • It can create new business opportunities and can generate jobs, especially for women.

What is the status of Indian women in care economy?

  • Healthy development of the care economy in India is necessary to support the primary caregivers in our society.
  • Women are primary caregivers across the life course of household members.
  • Women in care economy – As of 2022, 36.5% of females were employed as unpaid family workers as related to 9.3% of males.
  • 37.5% of FLFPR comprises of women who are not paid for the work they do, which is separate from domestic work.
  • The difference between female and male unpaid family labour employment is higher in rural areas than in rban areas.
  • Women aged 15-64 years spend about three times more time daily than men in unpaid domestic work.
  • Economic value of women’s unpaid domestic and care work in India ranges between 15% - 17% of GDP.
  • For women to participate in the economy, their care responsibilities need to shift elsewhere.
  • Challenges - There are no standardised processes and it lacks minimum wages, employment standards, safety and security measures, and quality standards for care by hired workers.
  • Steps to offload women’s care responsibilities
    • Reduce unpaid family labour employment
    • Relief from unpaid domestic work
    • Reduce Domestic Care Burden

Female Labour Force Participation

  • LFPR - Labour Force Participation Rate denotes the percentage of persons in labour force (i.e. working or seeking or available for work) in the population.
  • It consists of both employed and unemployed individuals, but not those who are inactive (due to education, discouragement, caring duties, retirement, disability, etc.)
  • FLFPR – It is the percentage of women aged 15 and older who are economically active.
  • It indicates how many women are part of the labour force
  • FLFPR in India - According to the Economic Survey 2023-24, the FLFPR in India was 37% (2022-23) against a world average of 47.8% (2022).
  • Recent trends - FLFPR increased from 23.3% in 2017-18 to 37% in 2022 and there is upward trend of female LFPR from 24.6% in 2018 to 36.6% in 2022 in rural India.

What are the measures taken in India?

  • Anganwadi network - Some State governments have focused on building support services through the existing Anganwadi network.
  • Increased budget allocation - In the 2024-25 Budget, there has been a 3% increase in the Ministry of Women and Child Development’s budget for the integrated childcare and nutrition programme (Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0 scheme).
  • Community based Crèches - Crèches for children are operational with partnership between government and non-government bodies.
  • Skilling and certification – Various apex bodies are involved in the skilling and certification of different cadres of care workers.
    • Home Management and Care Givers Sector Skill Council (earlier Domestic Workers Sector Skill)
    • Healthcare Sector Skill Council
    • National Skill Development Corporation
  • International coordination - The ILO Resolution on Decent Work and the Care Economy was adopted by the International Labour Conference during its 112th Session, in June 2024.
    • G20 Bali Care Economy Dialogue, have provided comprehensive recommendations to governments.
  • Delhi Declaration – It was prepared under India’s leadership of G20 in 2023 that calls upon the G20 countries to
    • Promote investment in the availability and accessibility of social protection, and to affordable care infrastructure
    • Address the unequal distribution in paid and unpaid care and domestic work
    • Promote the continued participation of women in education and employment

What lies ahead?

  • Formulate a comprehensive policy to define the care ecosystem from a life course perspective.
  • Review the existing models of Community based Creches for replicability, financial sustainability, and scalability.
  • Develop a more widespread network of creches suitable to the local context and populace is required in rural, tribal, and urban areas to facilitate the participation of women in the workforce.
  • Developing a needs-based assessment of the mix of care services required across age groups, socio-economic status, and geographies.
  • Address the gap in the training, skilling, and certification of a mix of care workers.
  • Map supply-side actors and institutions including the public, private, and non-profit sectors.

References

  1. The Hindu | India needs to develop a care ecosystem
  2. PIB | India’s Care Economy
Login or Register to Post Comments
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to review.

ARCHIVES

MONTH/YEARWISE ARCHIVES

sidetext
Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme
sidetext