Site icon IAS Current Affairs

Women, Business and the Law 2024 Report

Women, Business and the Law 2024 Report

Source: PIB
GS II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation


Overview

Photo by Levi Guzman on Unsplash
  1. News in Brief
  2. What are the findings?
  3. Performance of India

Why in the News?

Women, Business and the Law 2024 is the tenth in a series of annual studies measuring the enabling environment for women’s economic opportunity in 190 economies.

News in Brief

  • It measures women’s economic participation in – mobility, workplace, pay, marriage, parenthood, entrepreneurship, assets, and pensions.
  • The data offer objective and measurable benchmarks for global progress toward gender equality.
What are the findings?

  • Pay
    • Women earn just 77 cents for every dollar paid to men.
    • In all, 92 economies lack provisions mandating equal pay for work of equal value; 20 prohibit a woman from working at night; and 45 prohibit a woman from working in jobs deemed dangerous.
  • Country Analysis
    • The report also assesses the gap between legal reforms and actual outcomes for women in 190 economies.
    • The report highlights that countries, on average, have established less than 40% of the systems needed for full implementation.
  • Womens Safety
    • Most concerning is women’s safety, as women enjoy barely a third of the needed legal protections against domestic violence, sexual harassment, child marriage and femicide.
    • Out of 151 countries that have laws in place prohibiting sexual harassment in the workplace, just 39 have laws prohibiting it in public spaces, according to the report.
  • Childcare Laws
    • Most countries have scored poorly on childcare laws.
    • Today, only 78 economies—fewer than half—provide some financial or tax support for parents with young children.
    • Only 62 countries have quality standards governing childcare services.
  • Women Entrepreneurship
    • Women face impediments in the area of entrepreneurship.
    • Just one in five economies have added gender-sensitive criteria for public procurement processes.
    • Women also earn just 77% of what men earn, as per the report.
  • Retirement
    • In 62 economies, the age at which men and women can retire is not the same, with women retiring earlier than men.
    • In 81 economies, a woman’s pension benefits do not account for periods of work absences related to childcare.
Performance of India

  • India’s rank has marginally improved to 113.
  • India has a score of 74.4 per cent.
  • Indian women have just 60 per cent of the legal rights compared to men.
  • India scored higher than both the global and South Asian averages in supportive frameworks.
  • India performed lower in frameworks was childcare.
  • India receives one of its lowest scores in the indicator evaluating laws impacting women’s pay.

Daily Current Affairs: Click Here

Rate this Article and Leave a Feedback

Exit mobile version