During pandemic rebound, Latin America's working mothers fall behind
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[September 09, 2021] By
Lucila Sigal
BUENOS AIRES/ASUNCION/
SANTIAGO (Reuters) -
Latin America's mothers are falling behind in the pandemic economic
rebound, returning to the labor force more slowly than men in a trend
experts say could set back female workforce participation by a decade.
An analysis by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), which
included countries in South America's "Southern Cone," as well as
Mexico, showed women overall taking the biggest employment hit when
COVID-19 struck last year.
Behind the trend: women more often work in sectors most impacted by the
pandemic, including tourism, commerce and education. Entrenched gender
imbalances also has meant women have faced the lion's share of unpaid
domestic work and care-giving, sharpened by lengthy school closures in
the region.
"We are seeing that in a disproportionate way those (domestic) demands
are being attended by women," Luis Felipe Lopez-Calva, UNDP Director for
Latin America and the Caribbean told Reuters.
While women overall have been impacted, there are some key differences
between groups. Mothers in two-parent households are the least likely to
return to work outside the home, while single mothers - though hit hard
initially - have seen a sharper rebound in employment and labor
participation.
Latam labor force: women fall behind https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/LATAM-WOMEN/jnvweenqxvw/chart.png
"It was not easy to find work in the pandemic," said Barbara Temperley,
a Buenos Aires business administration graduate with two children aged 9
and 12, adding her guess was that employers were worried about the
impact of care tasks on female hires.
"Things did not return to how we were before the pandemic."
In nearby Paraguay, Rosa Maidana, a 45-year-old mother of three
children, cited long school closures, which meant many kids are unlikely
to have in-person classes until early next year. She was driving a
school bus before the virus spread.
[to top of second column] |
Rosa Maidana, 45, poses for a photo with the van in which she worked
transporting students before the restrictions due to the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19), in San Antonio, Paraguay September 3, 2021.
Latin America's mothers are lagging behind in the pandemic of
economic recovery, returning to the labor force more slowly than
men, in a trend that experts say could set back female labor force
participation for a decade across the region. Picture taken
September 3, 2021. REUTERS/Cesar Olmedo
"Everything changed with the pandemic. I had my vehicle and I kept doing it
until there were no more classes. Then I stayed home with my kids, who have
virtual classes every day, and now we depend on my husband's work," she said.
The UNDP report showed the single mothers had been affected in terms of
unemployment and labor force participation, but are now actually bouncing back
further in the recovery - partly out of necessity to get back a living wage.
"There was no option not to work, something had to be done," said Rosa Navarro,
a 52-year-old Chilean with seven grown children, who had to reinvent her events
business with 20-member staff to selling breakfasts and lunches when tough
restrictions came into effect.
"I am single, I do not have a husband to help me. My children give me a hand,
but we were very affected," she added.
According to the UNDP, in Latin America, where only 40% of women participate in
the labor market, 39% of households are headed by a woman and 26% are
single-parent households where the head is a woman. The study was done based on
household surveys from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Mexico, Paraguay and Uruguay.
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal; Additional reporting by Daniela Desantis in Asuncion
and Benjamín Mejías in Santiago; Editing by Nicolas Misculin, Adam Jourdan and
Aurora Ellis)
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