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SECTION 5 Lessons for Gender Policy
This paper has discussed what is known from past
experience of the relationship between industrialization and women's employment
opportunities in developing countries, in the context of international trade, and what
tendencies in the contemporary world economy seem to have implications for women's
employment in future. The analysis points to several areas of concern for gender policy
- There is a possible relationship between the degree and
duration of export orientation in manufacturing and the wage gap by gender.
One hypothesis is that the wage gap by gender widens as
export manufacturing capacity is consolidated. This proposition has never been
systematically investigated, and the difficulties of testing it rigorously are obvious in
view of the multiple determinants of changes in male and female wage rates and in wages
and wage relativities over time. This indicates two needs for gender policy. First, there
is a pressing need for research (or action-research) to investigate the hypothesis and to
develop better understanding of the factors involved.
Second, the precautionary principle may be important for
policy purposes in this connection. In other words, to ensure gender equity, it may be
prudent for policy makers to give credence to the "wage divergence" hypothesis
and draw up possible policy instruments to ensure that the more equitable pay relativities
that seem to obtain at the early stages of the export industrialization process (as seen
in Bangladesh and Viet Nam) endure.
There may be thought to be some inconsistency in
advocating use of the precautionary principle before the particular mechanisms that come
into effect are identified and understood in any particular case. A range of possible
mechanisms have been suggested in this paper. Nevertheless, it is clear that tough
monitoring and application of equal pay laws is the single main means of enforcement for
pay policy, regardless of specific cause; so there is a general recommendation to
governments to review the wage statutes and devote resources to enforcement of those laws
in anticipation of greater calls for their use, and to NGOs and donor agencies to support
advocacy groups able to press for action with employers and bring equal pay cases to the
courts.
Experience in Bangladesh and Viet Nam is a counter to the
argument that there is a necessary trade-off between pay equity and export success
that is, that a gender wage gap is in some sense necessary to competitive advantage in
labour-intensive manufacturing. In those countries no such gap in wages proved necessary
for entry into the international market in clothing. Government policy should seek ways of
influencing the incentives facing employers in such a way that productivity improvements,
rather than the socially unjust practice of reducing female wages, are seen as the best
long-term means to cost cutting and maintenance of international competitiveness.
- The distinction between educational attainment levels per
se and the subjects in which women obtain educational qualifications will become
increasingly important in future.
Scientific, technical and managerial qualifications are
all going to be important in giving women access to high-level jobs in the future,
particularly in export manufacturing industries, as they diversify and upgrade, and in the
newly internationalized services sector. In most countries, women are underrepresented in
technically skilled and in senior grades in industry, and so lose out as industrial
capacity evolves and the production processes in use become more diverse.
Policies must be designed and implemented to bring about a
more gender-equitable spread of students among different subjects at secondary and
tertiary levels of education, with a view to increasing the numbers of scientifically and
technically qualified women in the labour force. This may require a revision of curriculum
and teaching practices starting from the lowest levels of primary school. But it is
crucial if women's entry to the modern labour force in strength, brought about by building
capacity in export manufacturing, is to be converted to a gain in women's labour force
participation in all dimensions.
It may be particularly important to improve the
educational and training situation with respect to employment in the new,
internationalized services sector. While data entry and similar, low-skill operations may
offer immediate prospects for job creation on a significant scale for women, in relatively
prestigious work and at relatively good rates of pay, the work is extremely vulnerable to
labour displacement from new technology. Work in this sector will be inherently insecure,
and it does not carry promotion prospects for the women concerned. Similarly, many of the
low-level jobs in the financial sector seem doomed to disappear. The best prospects for
women, where indications are that access will not be denied, are in other branches of the
financial and management corporate services sector. Governments must ensure that equity in
educational provision, now so widely accepted as a policy goal at primary level, must be
carried through to all levels and all subject departments of the educational and training
system.
- The evidence indicates that in many developing countries
TNCs are becoming increasingly important as employers, especially in certain parts of the
services sector.
It may be an opportune moment in which to mount an audit
of TNCs' employment practices and to enlist their support for gender equity in employment,
as regards pay, promotion, and other practices. This applies especially strongly to
education and training, for research shows that TNCs undertake more training than
comparable local firms (Lall, 1994). Both governments in their capacity as
representative of the national interest and labour organizations, as well as
women's organizations, would have an interest in such an audit. In respect of their
involvement in the new services sector, this would be unlikely to meet with any opposition
from TNCs, because all the indications are that, if only in imitation of employment
practices in their home countries, they emerge as good recruiters of women in this sector.
Whether they are good employers subsequently in other respects is something that an audit
would reveal.
The value of a gender audit of TNCs would be to identify
any lagging employers; to indicate best practice in the sector, for the attention of local
firms as well as TNCs themselves and to serve as comparator for local employers; and to
give notice that the issue is important, and will continue to be monitored by governments,
in future. In a globalizing world, where governments' control over national macro-economic
policy is being limited by trends in international markets, discretion over employment
practices in the modern sector is an area where authority does remain with governments. In
exercising this authority in the furtherance of gender equity, governments can take some
action to ensure that internationalization of economic activity contributes to "human
development" and the betterment of society.
Trade expansion thus opens up particular possibilities of
leverage for social action groups concerned to bring about gender parity in employment.
Developing country governments need to be made to ratify ILO Convention 100 and enact
equal wage and opportunity legislation, if it is not already on the statute book. More
difficult, sound and effective mechanisms for implementation of that legislation need to
be in place. NGOs, the women's movement and any other groups acting for women's interests
need to be vigilant in preventing any movement towards greater wage inequality, and be
prepared to take action in the courts if necessary. 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 governments
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
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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