Monday, March 28, 2022

Care Work : unpaid Labor

Everything You Need to Know about Care Work The foundation of thriving communities and economies, care work largely falls on women. Mother carrying her baby on her back while working in tobacco fields in Malawi's Kasungu region. | Marcel Crozet / ILO / Flickr

By Leah Rodriguez

September 13, 2021 Meal prep and cooking. Collecting water. Caring for children. The amount of time spent on chores and caring for others might not always seem like a lot. But eventually, it adds up — especially for women and girls who live in poverty and are from marginalized groups.

This phenomenon is referred to as unpaid care work. Unrecognized and undervalued, this invisible labor becomes mothers’ and daughters’ responsibility. The percentage of men performing it is much lower than the percentage of women carrying out similar tasks.

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Global Citizen is joining forces with Decididas for International Women’s month to promote gender equality in Latin America. Tweet at Mexico and Latin America’s most important media outlets and ask them to hire gender editors. Negative stereotypes and harmful objectification of women in the media are preventing us from achieving gender equality. Global Citizen is joining forces with Decididas for International Women’s month to promote gender equality in Latin America. Tweet at Mexico and Latin America’s most important media outlets and ask them to hire gender editors. Negative stereotypes and harmful objectification of women in the media are preventing us from achieving gender equality. Global Citizen is joining forces with Decididas for International Women’s month to promote gender equality in Latin America. Tweet at Mexico and Latin America’s most important media outlets and ask them to hire gender editors.

Unpaid work is essential for households and economies to function, but it's valued less than paid work. Unpaid care and domestic work make a substantial contribution to countries’ economies. The total value of unpaid care and domestic work is estimated to be between 10% and 39% of gross domestic product. It contributes more to the economy than sectors like manufacturing, commerce, or transportation.

But unpaid labor rarely receives as much recognition. Estimates show that 16 billion hours are spent on unpaid care work every day. The International Labor Organization found that if care work was valued the same as other work, it would represent a tenth of the world’s economic output. Some governments depend on unpaid work to compensate for public services, widening the global gender gap further.

https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/womens-unpaid-care-work-everything-to-know/

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