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Executive Summary
The external economic environment is exercising an
increasingly important influence on the structure of production and the rate of economic
growth in developing countries. International markets have been greatly
"liberalized" since 1948, i.e. world tariff levels have been reduced, despite
periodic protectionist actions by Northern countries. Accordingly, the profitability of
selling in foreign markets has increased for developing country producers (taken as a
single category). Complementing this, domestic policies in many countries have become less
biased against exporting, to the extent that the formerly widespread autarkic approach to
industrialization has now been almost universally abandoned in the developing world.
In keeping with the trend towards liberalization, the
value of goods and services traded internationally has increased relative to the value of
goods and services sold on domestic markets. Within the total, the shares of manufactured
goods and, latterly, services have risen steadily at the expense of trade in primary
commodities. Despite their traditional specialization in commodities, the developing
countries have succeeded in building up their presence in these new markets.
In addition to the historical growth in the value of
international trade, the contemporary "globalization" of the world economy
which stems from improvements in telecommunications and information technology and
the opening of many local markets to foreign investors, especially in services has
further intensified the interpenetration of local and international market forces
worldwide.
The evolution of employment structures in general, and
employment possibilities for women in particular, have been significantly affected by
these developments. Any investigation of changes in women's income earning prospects in
the course of development must now take account of the international dimension.
The growth in international trade and the effects of
globalization have both so far favoured women's participation in paid employment. The
increased absorption of women workers into manufacturing in developing countries has
clearly been driven by changes in trade performance, in two senses. On the one hand, women
have been the actively preferred labour force in exporting industries, and on the other,
the change in trade orientation has entailed the relative decline of privileged male
employment in autarkic industry. Women now comprise about one third of all industrial
sector workers in developing countries.
Roughly speaking, while changes in employment
opportunities for women in the industrial sector have historically been due to trade
liberalization, changes in services employment which are likely to dominate the
picture more and more in the future are attributable to the effects of
globalization. This is having a twofold effect on women's employment opportunities.
First, new jobs are being created in information-based
industries, which use telecommunications infrastructure to access cheap, educated female
labour in developing countries for operations such as data processing, much as the
improvement in international physical transportation links facilitated expansion earlier
of production capacity in clothing and electronics in developing countries. This
amplification of female-intensive employment into some service operations is paralleled by
the recent expansion of exports of fruit, flowers and vegetables, again based largely on
use of female labour, from some developing countries. While the phenomenon was first noted
in Mexico, it is clear that for some East African countries, notably Kenya, this activity
has greatly expanded in recent years. It may represent the main or even the only immediate
possibility for viable engagement in international non-commodity markets for many of the
least developed countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where the female labour
force is poorly equipped, as a result of failings in educational provision, for work in
modern sector industry.
Secondly, globalization is facilitating the establishment
in developing countries of branches of service sector transnational corporations (TNCs),
such as banks and insurance companies selling to consumers, and specialist producer
services (e.g. advertising, accounting, legal services) meeting the needs of other
enterprises. Often these establishments supply services to other countries in the region.
Globalization is also encouraging the relocation of some former back-office functions
within TNCs, on cost grounds. Some analysts see in this process the probable total
geographical fragmentation of the operations of TNCs around the globe, and indeed the
final demise of the national identity (as Northern- or Southern-based) of some TNCs.
In all these cases, new employment is created locally in
the services sector, spread across both low and high skilled grades. Evidence of the
gender implications of such employment creation is extremely sparse, but there is some
evidence (e.g. for Malaysia) that the preference for female labour experienced in
manufacturing carries over into new trade-related services, in both low and higher skilled
segments. The preconditions for this are in place, to the extent that women are already
well-represented in the services sector in developing countries, and in professional and
technical occupations across all sectors.
Gender biases in educational provision in developing
countries, whereby women are concentrated in arts and humanities subjects, and in
professional areas such as the law, lend support to speculation that expansion of
trade-related services may represent an important new source of relatively well-paid
employment opportunities for women in the future.
The causes and extent of trade-related employment gains
for women can be explained in terms of the interaction between the economic
characteristics of North-South trade and the operation of gender relations in the labour
market and the gender biases in educational provision.
Developing countries' comparative advantage in
international trade in manufactures has rested and to a considerable extent
continues to do so on exports of labour-intensive manufactured goods
typically clothing and certain assembly-type stages of electronics goods production. The
differences in the level of technological sophistication embodied in these products (and
others like them, e.g. food processing as similar to clothing) do not undermine this
conclusion. But they do have consequences for the structure of firm ownership and the
nature of trade regulations in different sorts of industries. Entry to the low technology
clothing industry is relatively easy for new firms and clothing firms are predominantly
small and local; consolidation of control by capital has not been possible. Accordingly,
the bulk of clothing production in developing countries is by autonomous firms competing
against Northern-based producers in rich country markets; the latter have responded by
persuading Northern governments to put in place a notoriously restrictive, quota-based
trade régime (the Multifibre Arrangement).
In electronics, by contrast, the high capital cost of
high-technology production methods makes market entry for new firms extremely difficult,
and world electronics production is dominated by a small number of TNCs, which have not
wished to see final product prices raised in destination markets and have resisted
imposition of tariffs and quotas on electronics components and products. The trade régime
which resulted has facilitated the rapid rate of exports of electronics from developing
countries. TNCs located much of the separable assembly stages in production of
micro-circuits, computers and telecommunications equipment in developing countries to take
advantage of low wages and maintain competitive position against their rivals. Thus the
theory of comparative advantage, based on the stylized fact of lower wages in developing
countries, is able to explain the pattern of North-South trade flows in industries across
the technological spectrum.
Women are concentrated as workers within all parts of
relatively labour intensive operations in the industrial sector, in both North and South.
The fundamental reason for this concentration is that women, for a variety of socially
determined reasons, directly or indirectly discriminatory in character, are paid lower
wages than men. Typically the ratio of female:male wages is about two thirds. Hence women
are the source of the lowest of low-wage labour available and the mobilization of women
into the export sector in developing countries can be logically interpreted as the
ultimate expression of the forces of comparative advantage.
Neo-classical economists explain the wage differential by
gender in terms of women's lesser educational attainments and the consequences of their
truncated or intermittently interrupted involvement in wage employment. But a much deeper
analysis is needed. Hierarchical gender relations in society at large are clearly
manifested in the labour market too. There are actual or perceived gender-based
differences in workers' involvement in paid employment which have acted to restrict
women's employment opportunities. For example, women are commonly prevented by statute
from working night shifts, which limits their possibilities of employment in continuous
process industries; women are similarly perceived of as in need of protection from heavy
and dangerous work both permeated by conceptions of masculinity and thus
largely excluded from engagement in heavy industry; women leave employment periodically
for childbearing, which carries over into expectations of women's lack of commitment and
relative docility in the face of dismissal and poor treatment; and this, combined with the
fact that women typically (though by no means always) enter the labour market with lesser
levels of educational attainment, translates into a perception that women are suited to
"lesser skilled" and therefore appropriately lesser paid jobs in itself
another gender-based, socially constructed inference rather than an objective feature of
reality.
For all these reasons, women have been crowded into
particular segments of the labour market, where the relative imbalance of demand and
supply serves to reinforce wage settlements lower than in other parts of the employment
structure. From a gender perspective, therefore, the public policy problem is particularly
severe. So many factors interact to maintain the male-female wage differential and pattern
of labour market segmentation and the educational and life-cycle decisions which women
make or have made for them on the basis of it, which serve to perpetuate the
inequitable gender order.
Since one of the main goals of gender equity is the
reduction in women's economic dependence, the increased incorporation of women in
trade-related wage employment in developing countries may be interpreted as a positive
development. But evaluation of the changes depends on two other main factors: first,
equality of female and male wages is crucial if the patterns of female dependence and
subordination are to be broken; and second, the terms of employment in trade-related
activity must be equitable if the new trade-related demand for female labour is to lead to
any consolidation in women's position in the labour market. On the first point, the
evidence is mixed and inconclusive. On the one hand, data on wages in export processing
zones, where employment of women in export production has been concentrated to date,
suggest that women's wages relative to men's are deteriorating over time. Evidence from
some of the case study countries in the UNRISD/UNDP project for which this paper was
prepared seems to support this hypothesis. On the other hand, some recent data analysed
for a set of 12 developing countries suggest a process of steady improvement over time in
women's relative wages in the manufacturing sector. With respect to working conditions, it
is clear that expansion of female employment in export factories, where job security is
limited, represents a deterioration in the average conditions of employment in this
sector, even though cyclical demand conditions in the industries concerned play a part.
There is ample evidence, for example, of calculated actions of employers to prevent women
building expectations of long-term employment and the seniority wage structure and career
progression possibilities that might be associated with it.
In respect of both aspects of the situation, the
precautionary principle must be applied as the guide for public policy and action by
interested parties such as women's groups. Developing country governments need to ratify
ILO Convention 100 and enact equal wage and opportunity legislation, if it is not already
on the statute book. More difficult, they need to ensure sound and effective mechanisms
for implementation of that legislation.
NGOs, the women's movement and any other groups acting for
women's interests need to be vigilant in preventing any moves towards greater wage
inequality. Lessons can surely be learned internationally from the experiences of similar
groups in developed countries.
Two other possible arenas for action present themselves.
First, the potential for equal wage provisions to be promoted as part of perhaps
the least controversial part of putative "social clauses" in
international trade agreements should be explored. The effort to include general social
clauses in trade agreements has been strongly resisted by developing country governments
which see them as a veiled protectionist device; developed countries are divided and the
ILO, for example, is split down the middle over the issue. But the topic may be shelved
rather than permanently dead in international fora and women's groups might take advantage
of the pause to re-examine the issues, consider their position and lobby their own
governments accordingly to take a stand in international negotiations.
The second forum is the "sub-political" arena of
civil society, in which the international environmentalist groups have been so
influential. The recent case of Shell's reversal of policy over disposal of an old oil-rig
in direct response to pressure from Greenpeace is a graphic recent case. Women's interest
groups (both Northern and Southern) could bring their own strength to bear similarly
directly on TNCs, which are likely to become an increasingly important actor in, and to
have an increased influence over, labour markets and employment practices towards women in
developing countries. Vigilance over TNCs' employment practices in general and equal wage
payments by gender in particular could be monitored locally, information published, good
and bad employers identified and representations made for improved practices for women
employees. There is vast potential for international alliances between women's
organizations worldwide for movement on this issue indeed, in keeping with the
globalization of the world economy, international action may not only be appropriate but
necessary for promotion of gender equity in this connection.
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