For many women, unpaid work in and for the household
takes up the majority of their working hours, with much less time spent
in remunerative employment. Even when they participate in the labour
market for paid employment, women still undertake the majority of the
housework.
When women work outside the household, they earn, on
average, far less than men. They are also more likely to work in more
precarious forms of employment with low earnings, little financial
security and few or no social benefits.
Women not only earn less
than men but also tend to own fewer assets. Smaller salaries and less
control over household income constrain their ability to accumulate
capital. Gender biases in property and inheritance laws and in other
channels of acquiring assets also leave women and children at greater
risk of poverty.
Paid employment for women does not automatically
lead to better outcomes for children. Factors such as the amount of time
women spend working outside the household, the conditions under which
they are employed and who controls the income they generate determine
how the work undertaken by women in the labour market affects their own
well-being and that of children.
The informal slogan of the Decade of Women became “Women do two-thirds
of the world’s work, receive 10 percent of the world’s income and own 1
percent of the means of production.”
— Richard H. Robbins, Global Problems and the Culture of Capitalism, (Allyn and Bacon, 1999), p. 354
men have one dream, to respect a woman who respects them back, but all they found is shadows and imaginative descriptions of such a woman! they can't find more!!!!
ReplyDeletethis is because we are smarter and we know how to gain money with less work because working and getting money is our job whereas your job is to raise children and do the home jobs only
ReplyDeleteA mere opinion is not a fact!
ReplyDeleteYour job is not to get money alone. You have a duty, to your children and wife to provide safety, protection, and security.
And a woman's job is not to be a maid for the house...