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In today's world women
are playing increasingly indispensable roles in international,
national and household economies, but they still have a disadvantaged
economic position compared to men.
The new opportunities
offered by globalisation will not be fostered if women, new actors
on the world scene, do not play key roles in the economy, in social
and political life and in the family. The Beijing Conference stressed
the growing awareness of the leading role of women and declared
that women's rights are human rights. A new balance of power and
resources is needed if we want to prevent the new autonomy and
freedom from resulting in worsening conditions for women and quality
of life for all.
The rise of neo-liberalism
and the free market philosophy which see society, both domestic
and international, primarily as a market, where everyone is both
a producer and a consumer, pose a direct threat to equality and
social justice. A deregulated market economy which has no regard
for social or environmental concerns cannot promote global economic
and social well-being and will fail to protect the environment
and to ensure sustainable development. Neo-liberalism increasingly
threatens women's hard won rights, particularly the right to education,
to gainful employment and to health. Neo-liberalism likewise results
in the weakening of people's democratic gains as states continue
to give political concessions in the pursuit of more foreign investment.
Today globalisation
is being led by a few hundred transnational corporations, which
have economies larger than many national economies. Not subject
to national regulation, these increasingly important transnational
corporations disregard human and labour rights and the environment
in their quest for higher profits. More and more they are shaping
global work, finance, consumption and culture. Rarely do women
play any role in their decision making, but often women are their
victims.
In both the developing
and developed world there is growing poverty; the gap between
rich and poor continues to increase, both between countries and
within countries. Most of the poor are women as they are the primary
victims of exploitation and marginalisation and educating and
training women and girls especially in non-traditional work is
the key to their economic development. Targeting resources at
women by recognising their right to health, education and training,
by giving them full access to economic resources, and promoting
gender-balance in decision-making, is essential in order to overcome
poverty.
The Euro-Mediterranean
initiative which was launched in Barcelona in 1995 is an economic
forum which, in order to be equal to competition with other blocks,
must work for a greater involvement of women. They constitute
indisputable human and economic capital which must be judiciously
mobilised.
In Africa, women produce
around 80 per cent of the food and constitute more than half of
small-scale farmers and provide about three-quarters of the workforce
in food production and processing. But women still lack access
to land. Without secure land ownership rights, they are unable
to obtain credit and support for production.
In Algeria and in countries
where there is war, violence and extremism of any sort women are
the primary victims of atrocities. The very heavy economic consequences
lead to unacceptable levels of distress and poverty. Structural
adjustment imposed on certain countries by international institutions
(IMF etc), the harsh transition to a 'unregulated' market economy
instead of a 'social' market economy, add their disastrous effects
to the situation.
In Asia and Latin America
the dominance of neo-liberal policies has led to a burgeoning
informal sector, dominated by women and children, where flexible
working practices are largely unprotected by labour and health
regulations. So-called efficiency and profit are pursued at enormous
social cost.
In many developing
countries, where there is an acute shortage of gainful employment
opportunities, millions of women opt for migrant work, particularly
in areas that make them more vulnerable to emotional, psychological,
physical and sexual violence. While these women significantly
help their countries' economies, they are not only blamed for
the social costs of migration but are also largely left unprotected.
Deregulation and privatisation
may increase efficiency in the production of goods and services,
but also increase the risk of poverty. In much of the developed
world, structural unemployment affects women in particular and
they constitute the majority of low-paid, temporary and part-time
workers and the long-term unemployed. For women in the former
centrally planned economies, the transition to market economies
has had a disproportionately negative impact on them, in terms
of conditions of life and of higher rate and longer-term unemployment.
Unemployment is not only a macroeconomic problem. The unemployed
lose not only their means of support, but also part of their humanity
and identity. Salaries are still often determined by gender rather
than the skills required for the job, resulting in unequal pay
for equal work. Women's skills are a necessary resource for economic
growth and development. Women must therefore be fully integrated
into the labour market without any discrimination. Such integration
requires adequate labour and social policies and investment of
public and private resources in every field.
Institutions of the
social state have become objects of attack and in many countries
have been swept away by market ideology. Often, behind the need
for an austerity programme, there lies an ideological antagonism
to the welfare state. The cutting of government subsidies and
social welfare provisions has hit women the hardest making it
more difficult for them to escape poverty. The provision of education,
housing, healthcare and childcare, lessen the economic burden
on women and assist their economic independence.
The old social state
was based on a patriarchal model. A new welfare state must now
take into account the new conditions of the world economy and
labour market, the changed role of women, the growing presence
of immigrants, the need to include men in family responsibilities
etc. Social rights should belong to the individual citizen and
not be derived from family status. Active policies that provide
women and men with increased choices for work and family life
must be implemented in both public and private sectors.
Child labour is a product
of poverty and is a global problem. UNICEF estimates there are
250 million children working world-wide, many in the sex trade
and in bonded labour. Employers exploit children who represent
cheap labour, often in hazardous conditions and those akin to
slavery. Of particular interest is the phenomenon of feminisation
of child labour which is becoming increasingly evident. We cannot
wait for poverty to end before child labour is eliminated.
Socialists and social
democrats must face the challenge of the interdependence of the
modern world and offer a competing vision of globalisation which
focuses on markets serving people and on the distribution of the
world's resources based on justice. Building a new contract between
the genders must be a fundamental pillar of this challenge. Only
in this way can socialists and social democrats undertake collective
responsibility to ensure that globalisation becomes an instrument
of development, peace and democracy.
Socialist International
Women urgently calls on the trade union movement, both at national
and international levels to actively work for the protection of
the rights of those victimised by migrant, informal and flexible
work. The eradication of child labour should also be among the
movement's priorities.
SIW calls on states
to ratify the UN Convention on the Rights of Migrant Women Workers
and their Families and to fulfill their commitments as enshrined
in the documents of UN conferences such as the Fourth World Conference
on Women, the World Summit on Social Development, the International
Conference on Population and Development and the Conference on
Human Rights. SIW calls for collective political action at
different levels: supranational, national, local etc
a) to adopt gender-sensitive
policies and programmes of economic and social development at
national and international level
b) to balance inequality,
injustice and insecurity produced by neo-liberal policies, reinforcing
social rights and fighting against social exclusion;
c) to redefine the
international system of accounts to take into consideration women's
work, environmental protection and other social factors which
do not now affect the gross national product and economic measures.
d) to develop new and
wider public policies to ensure conditions of equity, equal opportunities
and social cohesion;
e) to consolidate democracy
and women's equal participation in decision-making using quotas
which have proved to be an effective means of promoting equality;
f) to regulate transnational
corporations to ensure the protection of labour rights and human
rights, including explicitly women's rights;
g) to pursue international
co-ordination of national economic policies in order to create
new jobs and to uphold and protect workers' rights;
h) to promote growth
and employment, whilst enhancing sustainable development and the
protection of the environment;
i) to design, implement
and monitor effective legislation, codes, social security regulations,
so as to ensure worldwide minimum standards of pay, working hours,
labour rights and to end child labour;
j) to promote economic
policies to improve the employment and income of women in the
formal and informal sectors and to ensure equal pay for equal
work;
k) to give women full
and equal access to economic resources, to credit and the right
to own land and to inherit;
l) to restructure and
target the allocation of public expenditure to promote women's
economic opportunities to education, training, the sciences and
new technologies;
m) to ensure that structural
adjustment programmes do not lead to a reduction in education,
training or health programmes and are based on advancing gender
equality and the recognition of women's economic contribution;
n) to provide free
and compulsory education for children;
o) to give women full
and equal access to education and training;
p) to stimulate and
assist fertility management programmes in order that women can
secure their reproductive rights;
q) to promote and develop
the means by which women communicate and share information throughout
the world, and within countries, in particular in impoverished
countries.
Only solidarity amongst
women will ensure that globalisation of the economy will promote
social rights, conflict prevention and economic and social justice.
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