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Briefs

Climate Change and the Future of Women’s Work

Climate change is a pressing global challenge that exacerbates existing inequalities, disproportionately affecting women, girls, and marginalised communities. Due to persistent gender inequalities, women face unique challenges in adapting to climate-induced disasters, often lacking access to resources, financial services, and decision-making platforms needed to rebuild livelihoods. As a result, they are often slower to recover compared to men.

International frameworks, such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Lima Work Program on Gender, stress the importance of integrating gender perspectives into climate policies. However, there is a lack of sex-disaggregated data to fully understand the impact of climate change on women’s workforce participation. This highlights the urgent need for research on how climate change affects women’s livelihoods and the importance of advocating for policies that protect their participation in existing sectors while empowering them to enter emerging industries.

By addressing these gendered impacts, we can create more equitable and sustainable solutions to climate change, ensuring that women play a key role in building climate-resilient communities.

Capturing Women’s Work To Measure Better

Women’s work is often more diverse and complex due to the significant amount of unpaid labour they perform, including domestic chores and caregiving responsibilities. Conventional labour force surveys tend to overlook these contributions, leading to an undercounting of women’s work and their exclusion from policy discussions. As a result, women are often not recognised as ‘workers,’ keeping them invisible in statistical estimates.

IWWAGE seeks to address this gap by developing better mechanisms for collecting data on women’s work. Through innovative probing techniques and sampling frames, our research aims to capture a more accurate picture of women’s labour force participation. Additionally, we propose a framework for women-centric surveys that can be aligned with national Labour Force Surveys (LFS) to provide more accurate estimates. Our study also highlights the bias that occurs when respondents other than women themselves report on their work, further underestimating women’s contributions to the economy.

By engendering labour force surveys, IWWAGE hopes to bring greater visibility to women’s work and ensure their inclusion in policy discussions that drive economic empowerment.

Digitization and its Effects on Female Labour Force Participation in India

India has witnessed a manifold increase in awareness and accessibility of job opportunities thanks to an increase in digitisation in all sectors. Technology has created new jobs and has made old jobs more accessible and convenient. Remote work opportunities, online training modules, and networking have become easier due to the internet, but its benefits are skewed.

This paper explores the impact of increasing digitisation on female labour force participation (FLFP). Digitalisation is associated with improving gender outcomes, alongside various socio-economic factors. Research highlights how increasing the use of digital finance, improved digital infrastructure and digital awareness has a strong positive and significant correlation with FLFP. The paper investigates opportunities provided by digitalisation for enhancing women’s economic contribution and empowerment in both rural and urban settings.

Women in STEM – Challenges and Opportunities in India

The nature of work is rapidly changing due to various factors such as skilling outcomes, sector-specific job creation, and demographic shifts. Global estimates suggest that up to 160 million women may need to transition into higher-skilled roles by 2030. In India, nearly 12 million women could face job losses due to automation, raising critical questions about how to retain women in the workforce.

This series of briefs explores the future of work in India, using secondary research and interviews with key stakeholders to highlight gender-responsive strategies. The briefs examine thematic areas and principles that can support and enhance women’s workforce participation, ensuring that women remain central to the evolving employment landscape.

By addressing the unique challenges faced by women, these insights aim to guide policy and action to create more inclusive and resilient workforces for the future.

Designing Gender Responsive Apprenticeship Programs

The National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS) and the National Apprentice Training Scheme (NATS) aim to enhance skill development and boost employment opportunities in India. However, the overwhelming male dominance in these programs highlights a significant gender gap in their implementation. To address this, several measures are recommended to promote greater female participation.

Key recommendations include collecting gender-disaggregated data to understand women’s choices, incentivising employers to hire more women apprentices, and conducting awareness campaigns targeted at women. Additionally, creating gender-sensitive infrastructure and addressing social norms that limit women’s participation are essential steps toward inclusivity. Integrating NAPS with the upcoming DESHStack portal will further enhance women’s access to apprenticeship opportunities and improve their transition into the workforce.

Implementing these steps will create a more gender-responsive apprenticeship system, fostering economic growth and empowerment for women.

Indian Skilling Ecosystem: Potential and Gaps

The Indian skilling ecosystem has seen significant investment to position the country as a global skill capital. However, despite these efforts, India continues to face challenges in female labour force participation (FLFP). Evidence shows that over half of women outside the workforce express a desire to gain skills for employment, yet they face multiple barriers such as limited access to training, gender-normative course selections, and poor job retention.

This brief explores the gaps in India’s skilling ecosystem, highlighting the need for gender-inclusive training programmes, better data collection on women’s participation, and addressing structural barriers that impede women’s progress from training to employment. Key recommendations include creating gender-responsive infrastructure, offering tailored curricula for women, and improving post-placement support to ensure higher retention in the workforce.

By addressing these challenges, India can maximise the potential of skilling programmes to enhance women’s economic empowerment and drive inclusive economic growth.

Strengthening the Skilling Ecosystem: Leveraging the Potential of the Private Sector in India

India faces a unique challenge with one of the world’s lowest female labour force participation rates and a large informal workforce. As nearly 50 million young women remain neither in education nor employment, it is crucial to bridge the gap between available jobs and the skills required by the market. While the government has led the charge in skilling efforts, the private sector holds immense potential to play a pivotal role in this ecosystem.
Despite efforts through initiatives like the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), only 36% of companies in India currently conduct in-house training. Barriers such as societal norms, mobility restrictions, and lack of awareness particularly hinder women’s participation in vocational training. To address these gaps, there is a need for stronger private sector engagement in skill development and workforce placement.

By mobilising Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) funds, creating local infrastructure, and offering financial and non-financial support for entrepreneurship, the private sector can foster inclusive growth. Additionally, businesses can leverage their networks to connect disadvantaged groups with market opportunities, offering targeted placement support to enhance women’s participation in the workforce.

Unlocking India’s latent talent through collaboration between government and private enterprises will help build a more skilled, diverse, and employable workforce, ensuring sustainable economic growth and increased female labour force participation.

Emerging Priorities in the Care Sector: Opportunities for Indias G20 Presidency

Care work-both paid and unpaid-plays a vital role in supporting economies and societies. However, it is predominantly shouldered by women, which limits their ability to participate in the formal workforce. As India assumes the G20 presidency, there is an opportunity to spotlight the care sector as a driver of gender-responsive development.

This brief explores the potential of the care economy, highlighting the need for investments in care infrastructure and care workers. By recognising care as a critical sector, and investing in childcare, elder care, and support for persons with disabilities, India can unlock new economic opportunities for women. Adequate investments in infrastructure and trained care workers can reduce the burden on women, enabling them to access employment and contribute to the economy.

The brief also calls for public and private sector collaboration to enhance social security, fair wages, and decent working conditions for care workers. Addressing the invisibility of unpaid care work through better measurement tools is key to acknowledging women’s contributions and integrating care work into economic policies.

Hybrid Work and its Effect on Womens Labour Force Participation

The COVID-19 pandemic redefined workspaces globally, with many organisations adopting hybrid work models that offer employees flexibility between working from home and in the office. In India, this shift holds potential to increase women’s participation in the workforce, as hybrid work can help women balance care responsibilities, safety concerns, and mobility challenges. However, it also presents unique challenges for women, including increased stress, burnout, and a heavier burden of unpaid care work.

This policy review highlights the need for gender-inclusive hybrid work policies, drawing on global best practices and insights from 60 countries. It reveals that while hybrid models are becoming the norm, there is a lack of specific provisions addressing women’s unique needs. In India, the absence of comprehensive remote work policies and gender-responsive guidelines further complicates the situation, despite some initiatives like the Maternity Benefit Act and the Sexual Harassment at Workplace Act extending protection to remote work.

This publication calls for concerted efforts by both government and private sectors to develop gender-responsive hybrid work policies. Recommendations include transparent compensation policies, clear communication channels, flexible evaluation systems, childcare support, and training for managers to ensure a gender-inclusive work environment. By adopting these measures, organisations can minimise attrition, maximise retention, and create a more equitable hybrid workplace for women.

Gender Responsive Budgeting: Good Practices from Select States

Mainstreaming gender into development financing has gained global momentum, with the Addis Ababa Action Agenda reinforcing the need for gender-sensitive approaches in financial, economic, and social policies. In India, the journey towards Gender Responsive Budgeting (GRB) began with efforts in the Sixth Five Year Plan and was institutionalised at the central level in 2004-05. GRB aims to integrate gender considerations across development planning, programme formulation, and budgeting processes.

India’s GRB mechanism functions through Gender Budget Cells and the Gender Budget Statement (GBS), covering 57 ministries as of 2022. While the framework provides an avenue for monitoring fund allocations and their impact on gender equality, significant gaps remain in its implementation. State governments, such as Odisha and Kerala, have shown greater success in embedding gender concerns into policy-making, with Odisha allocating over 40% of its budget towards gender priorities. However, at the national level, gender budgeting remains low, accounting for less than 5% of the Union Budget.

This brief highlights the diverse approaches to GRB across states like Odisha, Karnataka, Kerala, and Andhra Pradesh, showcasing experiences, lessons learnt, and good practices in advancing gender equality through fiscal policy.