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Salary to housewives vs counting women's unpaid work
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Jeemol Unni | 12 Jan, 2021
Kamal Hasan's political party in Tamil Nadu promised salaries to
housewives as part of its electoral campaign. And the idea was welcomed
by Congress politician Shashi Tharoor. Today, the media is also
celebrating the longest flight and the first from San Francisco to
Bengaluru manned by an all women crew of pilots and co-pilots led by
Captain Papagiri Thanmai and Captain Zoya Aggarwal.
How do
these headline grabbing news compare to the long drawn out battle by
feminist statisticians and economists to get better estimates of women's
work in the national labour statistics? As well as document her full
contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the country by
counting her paid and unpaid work?
In 1988, 'Shramshakti', the
report of the National Commission on Self-Employed Women and Workers in
the Informal Sector, noted that "all women are workers because they are
producers and reproducers. Even when they are not employed, they are
involved in socially productive and reproductive labour all of which is
absolutely necessary for the survival of the society. Women's work as
home-makers must be recognised as social/economic production".
There
has been major debate around the measurement of women's work
participation over decades. It is alleged that the traditional labour
force statistics collected by government statistical divisions ignore
the unpaid work of women. The definitions and standards of the
measurement of work are set through resolutions by the International
Labour Organization in its International Conference on Labour
Statisticians (ICLS). The 13th ICLS in 1982 set the early definitions
and criteria for the economically active population, employment,
unemployment and underemployment, amended in the later ICLS in 1987,
1998 and 2008.
The System of National Accounts of the United
Nations, which provides the international guidelines for collection of
data on the GDP, recommends that women's social reproduction work or
unpaid care work should be counted and accounted in satellite accounts
to the national accounts of the country. The logic is that including the
value of unpaid work in the national income will distort the estimates
of the flow of income in the country.
ILO's 19th ICLS is
supposed to have created more gender sensitive standards for measurement
of work. The traditional definition divided the labour force into three
categories, employed, unemployed and out of the labour forces (or
inactive).
The 19th ICLS agreed on an international statistical
definition of 'work' that included five major activities in which
individuals can be involved. The first major change was that 'work'
included paid and unpaid activities to produce goods and services. The
five activities constituting 'work' were: Production (including goods
and services) i) for own use, ii) for use of others for pay or profit
(normally included in labour force statistics), iii) for use of others
NOT for pay or profit within which there were three categories: a)
unpaid trainee work, b) other unpaid work and c) volunteer work.
The second major change was that an individual can be involved in more than one activity at the same time.
The
National Sample Survey (NSO) uses the traditional definition to measure
women's work in its labour force surveys, the earlier Employment and
Unemployment Survey (EUS) and its recent avatar the Periodic Labour
Force Survey (PLFS). The expert body in economic statistics is still to
grapple with the idea of the use of the new 19th ICLS definitions and
the NSO has to figure out if it will and can put the new definitions
into practice in its collection of labour force statistics. Till then we
have abysmally low women's work force participation which has been
declining.
The decline was particularly sharp in rural areas
falling from 48 per cent in 2004-05 (EUS) to 23 per cent in 2017-18
(PLFS) for women above 15 years of age. Women's participation in urban
areas was low initially but dropped further from 23 per cent in 2004-5
and to 18 per cent in 2017-18.
There is, however, a silver lining
in the newly released Time Use Survey (TUS), 2019, collected by the
National Sample Organisation. Unfortunately, it is extremely difficult,
time consuming and costly to conduct time use survey frequently. The
last TUS was conducted twenty years ago in six states in 1999. Statement
5 in the TUS, 2019 is presented here.
If we use the five
activity definition of work of the 19th ICLS, we arrive at very high
work participation of women as per the first major change of including
paid and unpaid activities using the TUS (see table).
Percentage
of women participating in each of the five activities in rural + urban
areas are as follows: i) for own use, 20 per cent; ii) for use of others
for pay or profit, 18.4 per cent; iii) for use of others NOT for pay or
profit within which there were three categories: unpaid trainee work +
volunteer work, 2 per cent, and other unpaid work, 81 per cent + 27.6
per cent.
As per the second major change highlighted above, an
individual can be involved in more than one activity at the same time.
It is clear that these estimates, using the TUS, cannot be compared with
the work participation rates by the traditional labour force survey,
PLFS. It is also clear that the process of computing work participation
of women who often engage in multiple paid and unpaid work at the same
time is difficult through a standard questionnaire method of traditional
surveys.
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