0.2119
7667766266
x

Declining Women Workforce Participation

iasparliament Logo
June 12, 2019

Why in news?

The Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) data for 2017-18 and the December quarter was released recently by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).

How is women labour force participation in India?

  • As per 61st round of the NSSO survey (2004-2005), 48.5% rural women (above 15 years) were employed either as their major activity or as their subsidiary activity.
  • But this number dropped to 23.7% in the recently released report of the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS).
  • In other words, in rural India, nearly half the women who were in the workforce in 2004-05 had dropped out in 2017-18.

Is this a new change?

  • The drop in work participation by rural women is not sudden.
  • The latest data from the PLFS simply continue a trend that was well in place by 2011-12.
  • Worker to population ratio (WPR) for rural women aged 15 and above had dropped from 48.5% in 2004-05 to 35.2% in 2011-12 itself.
  • In contrast, the WPR for urban women aged 15 and above declined only mildly from 22.7% in 2004-5 to 19.5% in 2011-12, and to 18.2% in 2017-18.

What does the sectional data suggest?

  • It is to be noted that the drop is not located primarily among the privileged sections of the rural population.
  • More importantly, most of the decline in the WPR has taken place among women with low levels of education.
  • For illiterate women, the WPR fell from 55% to around 29% while that for women with secondary education fell from 30.5% to 15.6%.
  • In all, the broad-based decline has higher concentration among the least educated and the poorest.
  • So clearly, the drop is not a result of a choice made due to rising incomes of the households.
  • In other words, it is not a choice by the richer households that women’s time could be better spent caring for home and children.
  • It is neither a trend among women with higher education.
  • So, it is largely a result of the fact that women are unable to find work in a crowded labour market.
  • This reflects the conditions of disguised unemployment, which is a cause of concern for the nation as a whole.

Which components have recorded decline?

  • The decline in work on family farms and allied activities contributed the most (14.8 percentage points).
  • This is followed by casual wage labour (8.9 percentage points).
  • Next came the work on family enterprises in other industries (2.4 percentage points).
  • These were counter-balanced by a 0.7 percentage point increase in regular salaried work.
  • There was also a 0.5 percentage point increase in engagement in public works programmes such as Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA).
  • In all, most of the decline (23.1 percentage points out of 24.8) came from reduced participation in agriculture and allied activities.
  • Men’s participation in agriculture has also declined.
  • Among men aged 15 and above, 56.1% participated in agriculture in 2004-5. In contrast, only 39.6% did so in 2017-18.

What are the causes?

  • Mechanisation and land fragmentation have reduced agricultural work opportunities for both men and women.
  • While men were able to pick up work in other industries, women reduced their participation in other industries as well as agriculture.
  • A man with class 10 education can be a postal carrier, a truck driver or a mechanic.
  • Such other work opportunities, except for work in public works programmes, are not easily open to women.
  • This challenge is particularly severe for rural women with moderate levels of education.
  • Hence, education is associated with a lower WPR for women, in the rural context.
  • Evidently, in 2016-17, around 29% illiterate women were employed, compared to only 16% women with at least secondary education.
  • The method of categorisation of workers in the NSSO survey and PLFS also contributes to the inflated numbers.
  • [It counts as primary activity in which respondents spent a majority of their prior year.
  • Subsidiary activity is in which individuals spent at least 30 days.]
  • If individuals are defined as working by either primary or subsidiary criteria, they are counted among workers.
  • Increasingly, as demand for agricultural work declines and women engage in diverse activities, their work tends to become fragmented.
  • So there could be tremendous undercount of women’s work under the standard labour force questions, particularly in rural areas.
  • A woman who spends 15 days on her own field, 10 days as a construction labourer and 15 days in MGNREGA work should be counted as a worker using the subsidiary status criteria.

What are the possible ways out?

  • The recent establishment of the Cabinet Committee on Employment and Skill Development is a welcome move.
  • The committee is expected to take the issue of declining female employment.
  • Development of transportation infrastructure could go a long way in bringing in rural women into non-agricultural work.
  • If the cabinet committee formulates appropriate policies, the potential gender dividend could be far greater than the much celebrated demographic dividend.

 

Source: The Hindu

Related News: Women Workforce Participation

Quick Fact

Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS)

  • PLFS is a recent initiative aimed at generating estimates of various labour force indicators.
  • It measures employment every 3 months in urban areas and once a year in both rural and urban areas.
  • The quarterly survey only captures data classed as current weekly status (CWS), while the annual survey measures both the usual status and CWS.
  • The National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation conducts the survey.
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