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Women’s Workforce Participation in India: Statewise Trends

Maharashtra, one of India’s most prosperous and industrially advanced states, has the highest Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) among all states, amounting to Rs. 19,400 billion in 2017-18. Despite its economic strength, Maharashtra ranks lower on gender indicators, with a sex ratio of 958 females per 1,000 males and a child sex ratio of 894. Female labour force participation (FLFPR) in Maharashtra is significantly higher than the national average at 31%, driven by rural participation. However, urban FLFPR remains low at 16.8%, highlighting gender disparities in urban employment. This factsheet explores key socio-economic and gender trends in the state.

Women’s Workforce Participation in India: Statewise Trends

Bihar, one of India’s poorest states, faces significant challenges in development across key areas such as education, health, and nutrition, while also lagging in gender development. With the lowest female workforce participation rate (WPR) in the country at just 2.8%, Bihar’s economic empowerment of women is a critical concern. This factsheet highlights the stark disparities in women’s employment in the state and calls for urgent policy action to address these issues, offering a comparison with national averages.

Community and Institutional Response to COVID-19 in India: Role of Women’s SHG and DAY-NRLM

The women’s Self-Help Group (SHG) network promoted under the Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM) assumed particular significance during COVID-19 given its tremendous outreach in rural areas, and the trust, social capital and networks enjoyed by women’s institutional platforms of the poor. Women’s SHGs of DAY-NRLM emerged as pivotal actors, leading from the front in crisis response. The COVID-19 pandemic has served as a trigger mobilising SHG women to come together to transcend their group identity and contribute through collective action towards crisis management, including helping those in need – thus demonstrating the transformational potential of women’s collectives. As the pandemic and its impacts continue unabated, this juncture can provide the women’s SHG movement in India the unique opportunity to define agendas and priorities that are most relevant to them during the recovery phase. DAY-NRLM can act as a critically important facilitation agency in ensuring this objective in the challenging times ahead.

With the objective of recognising the work undertaken by women’s SHGs, and highlighting their indispensable economic and social contribution, the report summarises good practices, strategies and innovations that were spearheaded by SHGs in collaboration with State Rural Livelihoods Missions during the pandemic. This report highlights that economic and social action unleashed by women’s SHGs coupled with existing institutional investments, mechanisms and collaborations forged by DAY-NRLM and SRLMs can help in developing decentralised, participatory and context-specific local solutions amid any crisis.

Women’s Workforce Participation in India: Statewise Trends

Gujarat, one of India’s most industrially advanced states, is a hub for textile manufacturing and diamond trade with a high GSDP per capita of Rs 1,65,414. Despite its economic strengths, Gujarat faces significant challenges in social development. The state has a low sex ratio (866 females per 1,000 males) and high rates of under-nutrition, with 55% of women aged 15-49 being anaemic. Education indicators also lag behind national averages, and gender inequality in the labour market is prevalent. The female labour force participation rate (FLFPR) stands at 16.9%, below the national average, with large gender disparities in both rural and urban areas. This factsheet explores key economic and social indicators for Gujarat in 2020.

Women’s Workforce Participation in India: Statewise Trends

Odisha, located on India’s eastern coastline, is rich in natural resources with forests covering 33.2% of its area. The state’s economy is largely agro-based, with agriculture, forestry, and fishing sectors providing around 50% of employment. Despite frequent cyclones and floods that impact livelihoods, Odisha’s service, industrial, and mining sectors contribute significantly to its GSDP. With a large tribal population, tribal women play a key role in forest produce collection and handicraft industries. Female labour force participation in Odisha remains low, with rural and urban FLFPRs below the national average at 15.2% and 13.4%, respectively.

Business Readiness Scorecard for Women

Women dominate India’s informal economy, especially in the handloom and handicrafts sectors, where they often operate as home-based entrepreneurs. Yet, they remain underrepresented in the formal business space. To better support these women-led enterprises, IWWAGE developed the Women’s Business Readiness Scorecard – Handloom and Handicrafts Sector (WBRS-HHS).

This data-driven diagnostic tool was developed through surveys with 800 women entrepreneurs across Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu—two states with distinct public and private sector dynamics. The scorecard evaluates business readiness across four dimensions:

1.Agency (decision-making, financial control, risk-taking)

2. Market Readiness (product portfolio, advance orders)

3. Production Readiness (worksite, inventory, personnel)

4. Legal and Regulatory Readiness (registration, scheme awareness)

By measuring these indicators, the WBRS-HHS helps identify strengths, gaps, and policy opportunities to scale and sustain women’s enterprises. The tool also offers a replicable framework for stakeholders to design targeted interventions across sectors.

The Future of Work for Women Workers

World over, the technology-driven gig economy has been expanding rapidly over the past decade, in which digital platforms connect ‘workers’ with ‘requesters’ to facilitate on demand work. While the gig economy has also become a buzzword in India, particularly in the last couple of years, and is attracting millennials by offering alternative employment opportunities. However, literature is scanty when it comes to measuring its impacts on the gendered experiences of gig work or on gig workers.

This report aims to provide a comprehensive analytical overview of women’s engagement in platform work, and presents findings from an in-depth study of women’s work in one of India’s leading platform companies. It aims to understand the emerging forms of labour practices and the impact of platform engagement on workers’ experiences, challenges, and impact on women’s empowerment and agency. The findings are based on interviews with workers, platform managers, and other key informants, and comprehensive literature review. The study presents an in-depth and specialised analysis of the gig economy to explain some of the unique features of the labour practices and consequences of such practices on the overall labour relations. The study also makes specific recommendations and argue that policy makers and platforms have a key role in ensuring access to decent work and social protection for these workers.

 

Emergency Cash Transfers

The COVID-19 pandemic has intensified socio-economic challenges across India, with women and girls disproportionately affected. Job losses, food insecurity, wage cuts, and financial instability have all hit vulnerable groups the hardest, exacerbating existing gender inequalities. Women, particularly those in informal sectors such as domestic work and construction, have seen their livelihoods decimated, while the rise in unpaid care work has further burdened them within households.

Evidence from past crises shows that women are more vulnerable to job losses, food insecurity, and violence, all of which have worsened during the pandemic. Additionally, women face exclusion from relief packages and farm support schemes, leaving them without crucial safety nets.

In light of this, there is a growing call for emergency cash transfers to support the most vulnerable, particularly women and girls. Such transfers, tied to the duration of the pandemic, can help mitigate financial uncertainties, reduce poverty, and promote food security. When complemented by investments in public infrastructure and basic services, an emergency basic income can provide much-needed relief and pave the way for a more inclusive recovery.

Food Security and Wage Employment

The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately impacted women and girls in India, exacerbating pre-existing vulnerabilities. Within households, women now face added responsibilities, including unpaid care work for children, the elderly, and sick family members. Outside the home, shrinking employment opportunities and reduced bargaining power have led to a loss of independence and agency for many women, threatening years of progress made through gender-responsive policies.

Women, particularly those in informal sectors, have been hit hardest by job losses and wage reductions. With 90% of the female workforce in informal employment, the economic fallout from the pandemic has severely affected their livelihoods. The crisis has also increased the risk of food insecurity, as women and girls often bear the brunt of inadequate nutrition in households. Additionally, women frontline workers face heightened health risks.

To mitigate these challenges, gender-responsive interventions are crucial. Expanding opportunities for women’s wage employment, improving access to decent work, and enhancing social security benefits are essential to addressing the long-term impacts of the pandemic and ensuring a more equitable recovery.

Gig Study: Summary and Recommendations

India’s rapidly expanding gig and platform economy-fueled by the rise of over 300 digital platforms in the past five years-is reshaping the nature of work. While this shift presents new opportunities, especially for women who face barriers to traditional employment, it also brings with it a unique set of challenges.

With one of the lowest female labour force participation rates in South Asia, digital labour platforms offer potential pathways for women to engage in flexible work and access income-generating opportunities. However, the sector remains largely informal, with gig workers-particularly women-grappling with issues around job security, income stability, safety, and lack of social protection.

This area of work explores both the promise and pitfalls of the gig economy, and the need for policies that ensure fair, inclusive, and secure work for women in the digital age.