Marriage driving urban women out of jobs
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Marriage
driving urban women out of jobs
In a country with globally low levels
of female workforce participation (women either working or looking for work),
urban areas have lower still numbers and Delhi the lowest of them all, as the
2011-12 employment data from the National Sample Survey office (NSSO) showed.
Now new research shows that one of the key factors associated with low
participation for women in urban areas is what Renu’s sister was alluding to –
marriage.
Economists Steven Kapsos, Andrea
Silberman and Evangelia Bourmpoula of the International Labour Organisation
(ILO) analysed nearly 20 years of NSSO data on employment to isolate the
relationships between a range of individual, household and regional
characteristics and the likelihood of a woman entering the workforce. They
found that being married was strongly associated with not being in the
workforce in urban areas.
This is a finding that has been
confirmed in micro studies too. In a sample survey of Delhi households in 2006,
economist Ratna Sudarshan, national fellow at the National University of
Educational Planning and Administration, and Shrayana Bhattacharya of the
Institute for Social Studies Trust found that the decision to work outside the
house was usually a household decision, and found that marriage significantly
altered the likelihood of a woman working – both in terms of women joining and
leaving the workforce. “While the birth of a child is usually associated with
women dropping out of the workforce in the West, in India marriage is one of
the most important factors,” Prof. Sudarshan told The Hindu.
Much the same is the situation in
Renu’s community in north-east Delhi. She and her sister (who did not want her
name published) both worked in a garment finishing unit near their home in
Seelampur from 2010 onwards. In 2011, her sister got married and had to quit
her job. By 2012, she had a child and was back in her parents’ home after
marital disputes. “Until I get married I can work. After that it will depend on
him,” she said of her hypothetical husband.
In rural areas in the ILO study,
marriage was associated with a greater likelihood to work when the researchers
added in those domestic economic activities not counted as paid work by the
NSSO. “This may reflect a tendency for married women to take on a traditional
domestic role that often includes economic activities that are not considered
to be employment based on the [NSSO] definition. In contrast, in urban areas,
the effect of marriage is negative for both [definitions]”, Mr. Kapsos
explained in an email to The Hindu.
Urban women with a primary or
secondary education were also less likely to be in the workforce than women at
the two ends of the education spectrum - illiterate women and those with a
tertiary education. Other research has found that women in urban areas with
tertiary education participate in the labour market because they are able to
find appealing employment and earnings opportunities while women with less
education participate because of economic difficulties, Mr. Kapsos and his
colleagues note. “Our results are similar. We find that only well-educated
women have a higher probability to participate in the labour market than women
with no education in urban areas in India. Thus, economic development in urban
areas creates opportunities for highly educated women,” they say.
Women belonging to the middle or top
income brackets were less likely to work than those in the poorest classes.
Other characteristics which decreased the likelihood of workforce participation
for urban women included the presence of a child in the household, the
household being large in size and the household’s primary source of income
being salaried work as opposed to self-employment.
Such social norms – like those
associated with marriage, child care and domestic responsibilities – have
relegated women into slow-growing areas of the economy like agriculture,
teaching and crafts, the researchers found.
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