Intentar ORO - Gratis

GIVE A WOMAN THE RIGHT WORK ENVIRONMENT

India Today

|

January 13, 2025

START THIS YEAR, AND IT WILL TURN AROUND THE ECONOMIC FORTUNES OF THE COUNTRY

- ASHWINI DESHPANDE

GIVE A WOMAN THE RIGHT WORK ENVIRONMENT

"IS this where we sign up for jobs?" It was the last sentence I expected to hear in the rural hinterlands of Uttar Pradesh from a mother of two young children, one a toddler clutching at her saree, the other an infant in her arms. She had persuaded her husband to bring her to the village site where we were doing fieldwork. This woman was no exception, as we subsequently discovered over several months. Young or old, married or not, women - who now have at least a middle school education - are eager to get into paid work opportunities, either via regular salaried jobs or via starting a small business of their own, or even gig work.

This palpable willingness to work even at low wages and in poor working conditions - despite crushing constraints of domestic chores, a lack of supporting infrastructure like tap water, piped gas or regular power supply, poor child- and eldercare facilities, and the absence of decent transportation between villages demonstrates two things. One, Indian women's ability to withstand challenges is exceptional and cannot be gauged through conventional data on labour force participation rates. Two, this flies in the face of mainstream academic wisdom that Indian women are unwilling to enter paid work, or are dropping out, for fear of sexual violence on the street and at the workplace, combined with family/community disapproval besides care responsibilities.

Are they really unwilling to enter paid work or dropping out never to re-enter? My research with Jitendra Singh reveals two features of the Indian labour market. One, women enter and exit paid work several times in short four-monthly intervals. In surveys when we ask women who are currently not employed about their willingness to enter paid work, an overwhelming majority are willing to work full- or part-time but regularly (i.e. for most of the year), provided work is available close to home.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE India Today

India Today

India Today

THE WRATH YATRA

The decade of progress was greyed by smoke and ash from riots, blasts and suicide attacks-a dark undertow that reminded India its inner demons had yet to be tamed

time to read

2 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

LICENCE RAJ MOGULS

How a new generation of mega-rich tycoons cashed in despite the country's lagging growth, a rigid economy and public disapproval of private ostentation

time to read

1 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

BOOM, BUST AND DRIFT

UPA's economy swung from high-growth global confidence to inflation, policy paralysis and capital flight, stabilising late under crisis management, but ending in exhaustion, lost credibility and an electorate unconvinced by belated recovery signs

time to read

3 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

JAI HO!

Indian cinema globalised, corporatised and digitised, embracing box-office metrics and superstardom while quietly losing its cultural monopoly as online platforms and fragmented audiences reshaped storytelling and power

time to read

2 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

OUT OF THIS WORLD

One astronaut's journey capped a decade in which India broke a state monopoly, built a private space economy, and set its sights on a crewed mission to the Moon

time to read

1 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

SMALL MAGIC

Doordarshan had us glued to the tube in the late '80s with iconic shows and mythologicals. And then there was the great opening up to western pleasures in the '90s...

time to read

1 min

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE NEW HINDU PUSH

A century-long acrimonious dispute over the Ram Janmabhoomi gets resolved in courts in favour of the majority community, paving the way for the realisation of the Hindutva dream of a Ram temple in Ayodhya

time to read

1 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

SHARP TURNS

In a Republic still young and evolving, decades would naturally compete to be called the 'most consequential'. But even put to that test, 1985-1995 would probably have the most stories that dominate our democracy and debates today

time to read

5 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

MASTERS OF THE GAME

The Modi-Shah duo have transformed the party into an electoral juggernaut, powered by astute strategy and relentless effort

time to read

2 mins

January 12, 2026

India Today

India Today

NATION UNDER SIEGE

Repeated terror attacks, from city bombings to 26/11 and Maoist violence, exposed intelligence failures, weak coordination and homegrown radicalisation, forcing India to confront the limits of security amid rising ambition

time to read

2 mins

January 12, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size