A 'Macro' View on Equal Sharing of Responsibilities Between Women and Men
- Author:
V. Esquivel
- Publication Date: Oct 2008
How can macro-economic thinking and policy help to advance the equal
sharing of responsibilities between women and men? This paper seeks to
suggest that, in relation to care, complex processes of cultural and
economic mutual determination are in place with both cultural and
economic 'results'. Care is necessary, yet undervalued; not
intrinsically gendered as a category, yet women bear a disproportionate
share of the costs. The paper argues that micro-level approaches to the
re-distribution of care costs may not be viable in developing countries,
as they will experience overall 'care deficits' i.e. the total
available State and private resources to provide care are insufficient.
Macro level thinking and responses can help, if they focus on the
absolute levels of well-being that should be achieved in any given
society, on the one hand, and on who bears the costs of providing care,
on the other. Time-use data reveals how poor macro-economic policies,
such as structural adjustment programs, have made gender inequalities
in care responsibilities worse. Women have provided a disproportionally
high level of unpaid care work that the State has elected it will not.
Yet analysis shows that 'efficiency gains' would be made if this high
and often hidden cost was actually provided by 'public' infrastructure.
The paper defines two broad categories (macro-levels and micro-levels)
of policies that could be put in place to fill care deficits and
increase gender equality, and approaches for evaluating them. For
example:
? The State has a fundamental responsibility to provide minimum care services
?
Direct job creation (of decent work), in particular in sectors that
reduce unpaid care work burdens, could contribute to fill care deficits
and provide income to workers
? Social policies should be designed to
contribute to tackle gender inequalities in care burdens, instead of
taking them for granted and building on them; and to truly alter the
distribution of entitlements and income.