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GENDER - A LEFT PRIORITY
By Jayati Ghosh
June 2004 - (IndiaTogether) The just-released West
Bengal Human Development Report (HDR) 2004 focuses on the two major
public initiatives that have characterised the state in the past
26 years: land reforms and decentralisation. While there is no separate
chapter on gender, the attempt has been to incorporate a gender
perspective on all issues considered in the report. This is the
first HDR from West Bengal and is of particular interest given that
the Left parties, with their emphasis on economic equity and social
justice, have ruled the state for an uninterrupted 27 years.
Gender discrimination has been an ongoing feature
of economic and social processes in West Bengal. While it has declined
in some respects in the recent past, it remains significant. It
is much less apparent in health indicators such as longevity and
infant mortality, and most evident in economic variables and in
literacy. The life expectancy data indicate the improving health
position of women relative to men. West Bengal has been successful
in bringing down both birth rates and death rates, with one of the
most rapid declines in birth rate in India. Historically, the sex
ratio in West Bengal was worse for women than the all-India level.
But it has improved faster, and is now just above the national average.
For women in the state, economic exclusion remains
one of the most significant problems, and which tends to have a
spillover effect in other aspects of life. West Bengal has among
the lowest recorded rates of female work participation in the country.
Typically, this is evidence of gender discrimination, not only because
low participation rates reflect a resistance to women working outside
the home, but more significantly because they may reflect under-reporting
due to the social invisibility and lack of recognition of women's
unpaid work. Both of these suggest a major undercurrent of gender
discrimination in society.
It is true that female work participation rates
have been rising in the recent past according to the census, both
for main and marginal workers. But it is not clear how much of this
is due to better recognition and enumeration of women's work, and
how much was actually the real trend.
In rural areas, micro evidence suggests that more
women are entering into various types of economic activities related
to the expansion of local networks, such as panchayat-based groups
and self-help groups (SHGs). Most of this work is in non-agricultural
activities, although it may be in related activities such as dairy,
livestock rearing and food processing. SHGs have also helped in
increasing women's work involvement in a range of services, some
of which are relatively new.
SHGs are also active in urban areas, where they
have assisted women in income-generating activities that have added
to household income. In the urban areas, more women are entering
into the workforce as paid main workers, as well as those self-employed,
especially in various services. And the increase in the number of
female main workers has been more than three times the rate of growth
of urban female population.
But the urban gender gap in wages remains large,
mainly because most female employment in the urban areas is in low-income
occupations. Even in self-employed activities, women workers tended
to be crowded into sectors that are less remunerative and involve
greater drudgery.
Land reforms in the state - land distribution and
registration of tenants - were very effective in improving the class
position of the rural poor, and unleashed productive forces in the
countryside. They redressed social inequalities of caste, and also
benefited minority groups such as Muslim peasant households that
were among the poorest in rural West Bengal.
But they were much less effective in reducing gender
discrimination. In fact, until recently, the allocation of pattas
(small land holdings) reinforced existing gender inequalities. Joint
pattas for husbands and wives started only from the mid-1990s. Before
that, when most of the land was redistributed, pattas were granted
only to the head of household, who was typically male. Joint pattas
account for less than 10 per cent of the total, while pattas in
the name of women as single holders account for less than 6 per
cent of the total. The rate of allocation of joint pattas has picked
up recently in the state as whole, and most pattas are now granted
jointly to husband and wife.
The other important initiative of the state government
- enhancing people's participation through democratic decentralisation
and a greater role for panchayats (village councils) - has had much
more positive effects in terms of the empowerment of women. Throughout
the 1980s and 1990s - well before the 73rd Amendment Act of 1994
- more than one-third of panchayat members were women. This has
had dynamic effects on the social and political empowerment of women
in general and also positive effects on the general functioning
and responsiveness of panchayats to people's needs.
The significant increase in the proportion of girls
in education, the better performance of girls in schools, and the
strong motivation for schooling even among girls in low income or
socially deprived groups, can be at least partly attributed to the
influence of women panchayat members in raising consciousness and
gender awareness in the local communities.
Numerous examples show how local women leaders have
emerged through this process, transforming their own lives and those
of the society around them, and altering both social attitudes towards
women and the aspirations of women and young girls. There is a proliferation
- even in relatively "backward" districts - of young women
panchayat members from poor and socially disadvantaged backgrounds,
who are increasingly more articulate and empowered. They are able
to express the concerns of women in public platforms, and are conscious
of the need to influence policy-making.
Until the last decade, improvement in literacy was
relatively slow in the state, especially for women. But in the past
decade, the state government has been making concentrated efforts
through various special schemes (such as total literacy campaigns
and non-formal education) apart from formal schooling for children
to achieve the goal of 'education for all' as soon as possible.
While literacy among rural females is still low compared to other
groups, it has increased rapidly in the recent past, going up by
nearly 16 per cent in the last decade.
However, illiteracy remains a significant problem.
Even as late as the end of the 1990s, more than half of rural households
and nearly one-third of urban households did not have any female
adult literate person. In agricultural labour households, nearly
two-thirds of the females are non-literate. Poor school infrastructure
contributes to gender imbalances. In the government school system
in rural areas, separate urinals for girls are very rare, while
latrine facilities do not exist in most schools. Even so, overall,
girls are performing better in schools than boys.
So, while it appears that the condition of women
and girls in West Bengal is definitely improving, literacy and economic
empowerment are two areas, among others, that require more focussed
attention. And the pace of change is not as rapid as could be desired.
From: http://www.indiatogether.org/2004/jun/wom-leftwomen.htm
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