dc.description.abstract |
The pathway towards gender equality, poverty eradication and inclusive economic growth can be
built by women empowerment. This study addresses the problem of inadequate female labour
force participation in South Asia. As such, following a mixed methodological approach, both the
qualitative and quantitative analyses were triangulated to achieve the objective of the study.
Women’s Wage Compensation Sensitivity Index (WWCSI) is constructed as the ultimate output of
the quantitative analysis using a sample of 112 respondents (non-working females) from Sri Lanka,
India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The findings of that analysis suggested that compensating wage
differentials can economically empower non-working females in South Asia. However, wage
differential compensation is likely to be more productive among rural females and then among
urban females, and it will be more successful among less educated females. According to the newly
recognized backward bending nature of WWCS curve, wage differential compensation should be
offered for females in prime working age (25-45 years) instead of mothers with infants or elder
children. Further, governments should come up with temporary subsidization programmes
especially for urban females in order to turn housewives into own account worker because the
interest of females to earn at home is high. The follow-up qualitative analysis involved an in-depth
inquiry on empirical evidence of wage differential compensation sensitivity of non-working
females through a case study in Sri Lanka. Therein, motherhood and children’s age, co-habitation
of grandparents, male supremacy in traditionally patriarchal families, intergenerational education
and learning, voluntary child labour, human trafficking for women labour exploitation and growth
needs and domestic financial requirements were explored as the determinants of women’s wage
differential compensation sensitivity. |
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