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Opinionopinion

Women need opportunities at work so society benefits

It will take 112 years for women to achieve salary parity with men even though closing the gap would generate £1.4 trillion into OECD economies

(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Earlier this week, we celebrated the successes that women have achieved in every walk of life on International Women’s Day.

While there are giant strides being made towards greater gender equality across the world, the latest The Women in Work Index 2021 examining female participation in work in 33 OECD countries demonstrated both the challenges and, more importantly, the prizes that can be won from closing the gender gap within businesses globally.

The good news is that the female labour force participation rate has been increasing since 2011, while the gender pay gap and the unemployment rate among women has been decreasing.

However, the pace of change is still not enough and it is estimated that, at the current rate, it will take 112 years for women to achieve salary parity with men even though closing the gap would generate £1.4 trillion into OECD economies.

Yet there are exemplars that show the rest of the world how to make a difference in this agenda with Iceland, Sweden and New Zealand being the top countries for women in work through innovative policies such as generous parental leave, individualised tax systems, equal pay legislation, higher female representation in institutions, and an education system that addresses gender stereotypes.

For example, the New Zealand government in 2018 committed to ensuring that half of directors on all state sector boards and committees would be women by 2021.

A Ministry for Women was also created as an advisory body to help the government with female empowerment objectives.