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Ritu Dewan

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In India, dramatic fall in women s employment in garment industry. * 4: Sector Case: Textiles. Working conditions: ... (identification of employment trends; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ritu Dewan


1
Gender, Globalisation Trade
  • Ritu Dewan
  • Director
  • Centre for Development Research Action
  • China-India Feminist Economics Workshop
  • Gender dimensions of paid and unpaid work in
    China and India
  • Kunming, China 26-28 September 2014
  • dewan.ritu_at_gmail.com

2
Structure
  1. Locating trade trade liberalisation
  2. Gender trade inter-linkages
  3. Sector Case Agriculture
  4. Sector Case Textiles
  5. Sector Case Marine
  6. In Conclusion

3
1 Locating Trade Trade
Liberalisation
  • Formalisation of rules mechanisms
  • Doha, etc claims reality. Egs Loss of special
    preferences Banana exports to EU cotton small
    farmers
  • WTO GATS banking, insurance, health,
    transport, education, energy,
  • telecom, tourism
  • 2,500 bilateral regional trade investment
    agreements
  • Neo-liberalism DC v/s UDC Mobile K Immobile
    Labour

4
1 Locating Trade Trade
Liberalisation.
  • Processes of trade liberalisation in developing
    countries, trade-related policies of other
    countries at national international levels,
    result in production employment-displacement
    effects.
  • Under-capitalised entrepreneurs, lower skilled
    workers, women face difficulties in competing
    with larger well-resourced foreign enterprises
    that have added advantage of new technologies,
    sophisticated products, advanced sectors.
  • Revenue losses as excuse for closure of social
    service schemes.

5
2. Gender Trade Interlinkages
  • Supply responses
  • Women as producers are restricted at a certain
    production level in terms of technology used
    scale of production due to lack of access to
    various forms of capital.
  • Resource allocation within economies
    households
  • This directly impacts womens productive
    capacities also the rank at which they can
    participate in the labour force
  • Low labour productivity
  • Adversely impacts their skill-sets loss of
    competitive edge as economic agents.
  • Basic is access to ownership, control
    distribution of productive resources of all forms

6
2 Gender Trade Interlinkages
  • Complex ambiguous contradictory
  • Income / returns
  • Employment
  • Competitively priced consumer goods
  • Fewer assets to withstand liberalisation
  • Increasing informalisation
  • Weak bargaining power
  • Work wage differentials
  • Export-led growth at expense of women.

7
Women Workers Sectoral Pattern India
Sector 2004-05 2009-10
Primary 72.26 66.99
Mining Quarrying 0.28 0.3
Manufacturing 11.75 11.34
Utilities 0.03 0.08
Construction 1.89 5.11
Trade Hotels 4.14 4.55
Transport Communications 0.4 0.43
Financing, Real Estate, Insurance 0.63 1.05
Community, Social, Personal Service 8.61 10.16
100.00 100.00
8
Indias Trade Pattern
9
3 Sector Case Agriculture
  • Share of Agriculture
  • 1950-51
    2012-13
  • To GDP 58 pc 13.7 pc
  •  
  • To Empl 88 pc 55 pc
  •  
  • GDP per capita of Agri Workers is one-fifth of
    Non-Agri Workers
  • Marginalisation, Alienation, Displacement
  • Declining State investment

10
3 Sector Case Agriculture
  • AAG Pre Reform
    Post Reform
  • Food-grains 2.9 pc
    1.2 pc
  •  
  • Rice Yield 3.5 pc
    0.9 pc
  •  
  • Cotton Yield 4.1 pc
    0.7 pc
  •  
  •  

11
3 Sector Case Agriculture
  • Subsidies dumping
  • Diluting import restrictions (30 in 1 yr)
  • Free entry of seed pesticide MNCs
  • Unregulated input output markets
  • Poverty among Farmer HH 10 pc higher than
    non-farmers in rural India
  • Farmers as net purchasers of food

12
3 Sector Case Agriculture
  • Assetlessness, Feminisation De-feminisation
  • Hence, even if trade liberalisation does unlock
    export opportunities, it is unlikely that women
    farmers will have the capacity ability to take
    advantage
  • Post-WTO, many farms have moved to
    export-oriented commercial cultivation, leading
    to consolidation of land holdings. As big farms
    are generally capital-intensive, consolidation of
    land reduces employment, displacing women first.

13
...3 Sector Case Agriculture.
  • A peasant suicide every 30 minutes
  • 45 peasant suicides per day
  • 16000 suicides per year
  • 3,50,000 since 1997
  • Levels of Indebtedness Growth
  • Maharashtra 20

14
4 Sector Case Textiles...
  • Cotton Textiles
  • Cancun 2010 Cotton included as explicit item in
    Agenda by Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad. BUT draft
    text merely pledged WTO review of textiles with
    no mention of eliminating subsidies or
    compensation.
  • West African cotton farmers crushed by
    rich-country subsidies which reduced prices eg,
    USAs 3 billion pa subsidy to its 25,000 cotton
    farmers
  • WTO suggested that West African countries be
    encouraged to diversify out of cotton altogether.

15
4 Sector Case Textiles
  • Brunt of adjustments shifted to manufacturers
    their employees, including low-skilled women
    producers.
  • End of MFA led to reallocation of jobs shifting
    of markets from Maldives to China, India to
    Bangladesh.
  • Shift to technologically advanced methods to
    increase productivity, affecting semi-skilled
    female labour force previously employed.
  • In India, dramatic fall in womens employment in
    garment industry.

16
4 Sector Case Textiles.
  • Working conditions excessively long hours, lack
    of freedom of association, continuous inhaling of
    toxic substances, prohibition of rest breaks,
    etc.
  • As competition is expected to intensify after
    final elimination of quotas, working conditions
    will deteriorate further because of more intense
    pressures to cut production costs.

17
5 Sector Case Fishing EPZs
  1. Over-exploitation of marine resources.
  2. Super profits accruing to exporters.
  3. Occupation of coast through legal illegal
    methods.
  4. Drastic rise in sea-pollution decline in
    production.
  5. Violation of CRZ environmental laws.
  6. Displacement.

18
5 Sector Case Fishing EPZs.
  1. 90 percent are women employees no-marriage
    clause proof of non-pregnancy.
  2. Strict gender-based division of labour.
  3. Conditions of work wrt EU Quality Control.
  4. Health Occupational safety.
  5. 98 hour week overtime toilet coupons unpaid
    weekly off no leave whatsoever.
  6. Majority migrants conditions of stay mobility.

19
6 In Conclusion
  • Gender-disaggregated data
  • Categorisation of trade sectors sub-sectors
  • Gendered value chain analyses (identification of
    employment trends primary support activities
    tracing profits losses etc)
  • Employment conditions

20
...6 In Conclusion...
  1. Capacity Building Financial Strengthening
    Training, skill up-gradation, provision of
    subsidised services, financial support to
    enhance womens capacity to compete in business
    in labour market. Eg ICT Women entrepreneurs
    MSMEs.
  2. Gendering programs IFIs, donors,
    inter-governmental organisations, etc.
  3. Strategies strategic alliances Multi-faceted
    multi-level between gender equality advocates
    key stakeholders

21
6 In Conclusion
  1. Pre-project Rapid Gender Assessment Surveys
  2. Formation of sector-wise multi-agency steering
    committees
  3. Systematic institutionalised evaluation via
    appropriate gender budgeting tools per project
  4. Barriers Non Tariff Barriers identification
    evaluation

22
...6 In Conclusion.
  • 12. Monitoring gendered impacts of trade policies
    agreements to hold govts accountable for their
    commitments to gender equality, via
  • Trade Policy Review Mechanism (TPRM)
  • Sustainable Impact Assessments (SIA)
  • Gender Trade Impact Assessment (GTIA)
  • Poverty Social Impact Analysis (PSIA).

23
  • thank you
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