Effects Of Economic Recession On Women
Redundant Women: The Effects of Economic Recession on
Women
Economic recession is defined to be a period of time
(two consecutive quarters) where there is dismal or negative growth in an
economy of a specific region or country. Economic recession has different
effects on each sector of a nation. A particular sector could experience
an impact that could distinctive only in his or her sector.
Women
comprises half of the worlds population. During recessions, there is a
relative downturn on womens employment that ever before. Before the
United States recession in 2001, women were not greatly affected by the
economic recession. However, after the 2001 recession in the United
States, omen started losing a lot of jobs.
Women also experience
low employment rates. Families rely on womens employment to boost the
family income during a recession. According to the United States Bureau of Labor
Statistics:
1. When women lose jobs, families lose a
substantial share of the income. Women salaries are said to be one third
of the whole family budget.
2. Over the past 30 years, families who
have a working wife have seen real increases in family income.
3.
During the 2001 recession, women were hit harder by unemployment than
men.
4. After the recession of 2001, women were able to get back to
their jobs but where unable to gain or experience any increase in their
employment rates.
5. Women are said to be harder hit by the 2008
recession since women are disproportionately represented in state and
local government services.
Women are also greatly affected by job
losses during economic recession. Women are said to be the last person to
be hired, but the last person to be fired. Unlike women, men shows stable
numbers since United States had experienced the economic
recession
Between March 2001 and August 2004, women lost jobs in a
number of key industries. Women lost 347,000 jobs in information alone. In
retail industries, women lost 367,000 jobs. The biggest lost will be in
the manufacturing industry which cost women over a million jobs. These
numbers are just in the United States alone.
Unemployment rate
among adult women workers rise faster compared to men workers. From 3.8
percent in March 2007 it went up to 4.6 percent in March 2008. There is
also a significant effect on the wage of women compared to men. Womens
wages are more unstable than mens wages.
Women have the tendency
or risk of seeing large drops in income than men do. It has been
culturally imbedded (based on gender analysis of events) that womens
income just fill in the disparity of mens wage in terms of providing for
the family. Thus womens wage not being a major source of funds is more at
risk of deduction.
In developing countries, women are facing
poverty brought about by economic recession blowing out of proportions.
With lack of work opportunities and immense poverty, women are forced to
enter into prostitution and white slavery.
When economic recession
hit in Asia in mid- 1997, women was the hardest hit by the crisis. Many
women who have entered these industries come from rural areas because they
could no longer sustain themselves and their families. Because of the
recession, a lot of employees were released from their work. Women,
carrying the burden of providing for their families were provided no other
options.
Southeast Asian countries were deeply affected by the
financial crisis and were left with social scars. Whenever economic
recession or crisis similar to this happens, women and children bear the
scars.
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