Why
the concerns of nearly fifty percent of the population have been falling on
deaf years continuously?
The
situation of women isn’t bad in one or two countries but is a worldwide phenomenon.
From rapes and molestations issues in country like India to the fight for
abortion rights and control over one’s own body in USA, the world seems to have
no differentiation when the issue at being addressed is about gender
sensitization and respect for women’s rights. Perhaps, that’s the reason why
World Economic Forum stated that while it will take 100+ years to close the
gender gap , it will take 200+ years to bring parity in workforce. One of the
videos by P&G titled Always Like a Girl stands as the perfect example of
how girls at a young age see themselves positively and are ambitious while the
women in the later ages often do underestimate their capabilities and potential
because of the constant tough societal circumstances they are subjected to.
While
the Indian government was quick to dismiss the report compiled by Thomson
Reuters recently which stated our country as being the most unsafe for women in
the world, the situation of women in India needs to be understood in many
contexts in order to get a real fact check regarding their standard of living
and the opportunities available to them.
According
to latest ASER report, 13.5% of the girls in age category of 15-16 are not
enrolled in school. Even those girl students who are enrolled in school often
have to face difficult times when they reach higher classes owing to lack of
safe transportation, which results in them dropping out due to safety concerns
of their parents. Girls being interested in engineering is proven by the fact
that out of total 15 lakh students graduating as engineers from over 3000
institutes in India, around 30% of them are girls but the figure falls
drastically when its about them being in India’s most prestigious colleges like
IITs. This year the percentage of girls out of total number of students who
qualified for admission into IITs stood at just 13.8%. The condition is
somewhat similar across the STEM fields.
This
leads us to measure the condition of women when they join the workforce after
completing their education. The participation of women in workforce in India
has fallen sharply from 32% in 2015 to 25% in 2018, with again the
non-availability of safe public transport facilities emerging as one if the
biggest issues. While our government’s own data from MoSPI does accepts that women do make
up 42% of the new graduates who join the formal workforce, the number continues
to depreciate to just 10% women present in the senior level management roles
which further dwindles to only 1% reaching the CEO role finally.
The
biggest culprit behind this constant degradation of the women in our society is
the unknown bias with which the male population acts constantly. In a recent
study, it was found that women candidates have 30% less chances of being called
for a job interview despite having same CV quality as that of male candidates while
applying for the same job. Additionally, the unconscious bias of men in terms
of seeing women lacking the capability to take tough business decisions and
being more driven by emotions hugely disincentivises their chances of being
recruited on stereotypical grounds. Even
in the personal lives with friends and family, a woman is subjected to
uncomfortable situations when the male members use cuss words which have an
underlying derogatory tone targeting the female gender, or referring to the
weaker male as being girlish. These unacknowledged biases have a deep
unconscious effect on an individuals’ future behaviour as well as shape up what
the children do learn from their observations thus compounding the bad
situation.
There
is a need to enable more women to rise to leadership roles because that would
bring innovative solutions through empathetic behaviour and understanding for
solving the problems faced by women employees. An excellent example is of Mrs
Arundhati Bhattacharya who during her stint in the HR domain at SBI revamped
the prevailing sabbatical leave structure after identifying the three most
crucial stages at which women are forced to leave a job. Those three stages were
when a woman used to have childbirth, when her kids would be preparing for
entrance examinations and when her in-laws or parents would get sick for
prolonged period of time - all standing as excellent examples of our
patriarchal society. The biggest failure of empowering woman has been caused by
the political leaders of India who over the years have been only giving lip
service to this cause while doing nothing to bring ground change. Only 14% of
current parliamentarians are women which is a huge misrepresentation when
compared to their population. The fate of Women Reservation Bill in Parliament
hasn’t still seen the light of the day. An even bigger challenge today is the
future of women in work with increasing automation and adoption of Artificial
Intelligence. Today only 22% of AI professionals are women and this number
faces further threat with the organizations looking to trim down the costs of
operations.
Thus,
what we need today is to bring in all the stakeholders from a diverse set of
fields to work towards the common goal of enabling women and girls to succeed
and making available the opportunities they have deserved since ever, but we as
a society have failed in safeguarding that for them. This cant be possible
without sensitising the men first regarding their responsibilities and making
the children of today more aware regarding these things in order to fasten the
progress we can make in empowering the new women leaders of tomorrow.
Ankit
Thakur
H19127
No comments:
Post a Comment