Hyderabad:Amid the present coronavirus pandemic, the women are facing a heightened risk of crisis owing to many cultural and socio-economic factors.
Though concern have emerged for migrants predicaments but the COVID-19 impact on women in socio-economic spheres has not been given utmost importance.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres said: "Put women and girls at the centre of efforts to recover from COVID."
The huge economic uncertainties due to coronavirus increases women’s fragility that exposes them to face the increased unemployment. The early data suggests that unemployment related to the pandemic is impacting women more than men.
According to the Institute for Women’s Policy Research (IWPR) report, based on payroll data between February and March 2020, women faced nearly 60% of job losses—outnumbering men in all sectors of the economy.
IPWR study suggests that the women most disproportionately lost jobs in the leisure and hospitality sector, as well as retail, professional and business services and non-durable goods manufacturing.
There was 39 per cent fall in employment of women in just April, as compared to 29% for men, the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) reported.
This further revealed that four out of every ten working women in the country lost their jobs while rural women were hit the hardest during the lockdown.
The UNESCO has informed that 154 crore students enrolled in school or university, including nearly 74 crore girls are severely impacted by the closure of educational institutions across the world amid the COVID-19 outbreak. Around 11 crore of these girls are living in developed countries were getting educated is already a struggle.
It has been estimated that over 89 per cent of students are out of school due to pandemic which will also lead to increased drop-out rates and further entrench gender gaps in education.