“Unlocking India’s Growth Potential through Women’s Workforce Participation”

“Unlocking India’s Growth Potential through Women’s Workforce Participation”


Context

  • Recently, Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted the need for stronger policies and legal frameworks to enhance Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR).
  • Improving women’s participation in the workforce is essential for inclusive growth, poverty reduction, and sustainable development.

What is FLFPR?

  • Definition: Share of women aged 15+ who are employed or seeking work.
  • India (2024 – World Bank): ~33%
  • Global Average: ~49%
  • Lower Middle-Income Countries: ~41%

Significance:

  • Drives income growth and economic productivity.
  • Improves health and education outcomes for families.
  • Crucial for broad-based development.

Drivers of Female LFPR

  1. Socio-cultural norms – Social attitudes towards women’s work.
  2. Supply-side factors – Women’s willingness and ability to participate.
  3. Demand-side factors – Availability of suitable jobs.

Why FLFPR is Low in India?

  1. Unpaid Care Work
    • Women spend 8 times more time than men on household & caregiving.
    • Global average (UN): Women spend 3 times more than men.

  1. Unequal Wages
    • India’s rank (WEF Global Gender Gap Report 2024): 120th / 146 countries.
    • Significant wage inequality discourages participation.

  1. Socio-cultural Restrictions
    • Patriarchal norms and safety concerns limit women’s work choices.

  1. Weak Labour Demand
    • Capital-intensive growth path → fewer jobs in labour-intensive sectors where women could work.

  1. Poor Education Outcomes (ASER Report)
    • Reading: 23% (Grade 3), 44% (Grade 5).
    • Arithmetic: 33% (Grade 3), 30% (Grade 5).
    • Regional Gaps: States like Rajasthan, UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, MP struggle with quality education.

  1. Low Skills Training
    • Only 4.7% of workforce formally trained.
    • Comparisons: Germany – 75%, South Korea – 96%.

  1. Restrictive Labour Laws
    • 15% of Indian firms cite labour laws as a major/severe constraint.
    • Comparisons: Bangladesh – 3.4%, Philippines – 6.4%.

Peer Countries with Higher FLFPR

  • Bangladesh & Philippines outperform India.
  • 1990 Comparison:
    • India: 30%
    • Bangladesh: 25%
    • ➝ Now Bangladesh surged ahead.

Reasons:

  1. Employment intensity
  2. Labour-intensity of economy
  3. Level of development (similar across peers; differences arise mainly from 1 & 2).

Case Study: Bangladesh

  1. Garment Industry (RMG)
    • RMG exports: 4% of total exports (1983) → 81% (2021), $42 billion.
    • Over 60% of workers are female.
  2. Impact
    • Without RMG boom, Bangladesh’s FLFPR would be only ~38%.
  3. Key Lessons
    • Demand-side job creation matters as much as norms & skills.
    • Labour-intensive exports enabled women’s mass entry into the workforce.

Conclusion

  • India’s FLFPR remains low due to unpaid care burden, wage inequality, poor education/skills, restrictive labour laws, and weak labour demand.
  • Learning from peers like Bangladesh, India must:
    • Improve education quality & vocational training.
    • Reform labour laws to enable job creation.
    • Promote employment-intensive growth in sectors like textiles, services, health, and manufacturing.

Source : Business Standard

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