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Care Ecosystem

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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
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