HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | Can Skill India solve the decline in female labour force participation?

Opinion | Can Skill India solve the decline in female labour force participation?

Given the less-than-laudatory attention that India’s rapidly declining female labour force participation is receiving globally, one needs to add another line to the famous girl child campaign: ‘Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao aur Beti Ko Kaabil Banao’

December 04, 2018 / 17:24 IST
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More than 1.04 crore migrant workers across the country returned to their home states amid the coronavirus pandemic-led livelihood crisis
More than 1.04 crore migrant workers across the country returned to their home states amid the coronavirus pandemic-led livelihood crisis

Varsha Pillai

A 2017 World Bank Policy paper titled ‘Precarious Drop: Reassessing Patterns of Female Labour Force Participation in India’, draws attention to the sharp decline in the female labour force participation (FLFP) which saw 19.6 million women either quitting or losing jobs. More than half of this drop has been attributed to rural India, where approximately 53% of women between the ages of 15 and 24 years did not figure in the active labour force.

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India’s FLFP rate ranks 121 out of 131 countries, with all other countries in South Asia, with the exception of Pakistan, faring better than India. Another recent report State of Working India by the Azim Premji University (APU) points to the much higher FLFP rate in south and Northeast India relative to the North and West of India.

Typically, women are engaged in low-skilled, low-productivity activities, and are paid far less; in fact, India’s gender gap in median earnings of full-time employees is wider than comparable countries such as Brazil. This means that women in India earn far less than men.