To achieve gender equality, we need women entrepreneurs
To achieve gender equality, we need women entrepreneurs
Shamshad Akhtar
In 2018, we have an
opportunity to accelerate progress towards gender equality.
Movements such as #MeToo have shone the spotlight on an
unacceptable status quo and demonstrated how too many women
the world over continue to be deprived of respect and equal
opportunities. Let’s use International Women’s Day to
build on this global momentum for change and suggest
targeted solutions to empower women across our economies and
societies. Women entrepreneurs have a key role to
play.
In Asia and the Pacific, there has been some
progress towards greater equality. Maternal mortality rates
have dropped by over 50 per cent between 2000 and 2015. An
equal number of girls and boys are now enrolled for primary
school education, and near parity exists for secondary and
tertiary education. But overall progress remains much too
slow. On our current trajectory, South Asia would achieve
gender equality in 60 years, Central Asia in 130 and East
Asia and the Pacific in 160. At this rate, most women will
be dead before they are equal. We need to speed things
up.
With this objective in mind, the obstacles women face to find decent work or set up a business in Asia and the Pacific deserve special attention. Female labour force participation has declined in our region over the past thirty years. Most working women are trapped in precarious, informal employment, characterized by low wages and dangerous working conditions. Women are relied on to give up to six hours unpaid care work a day: invaluable to society, but thwarting career prospects, ambitions and political representation.
We know that setting up a business is a key means for women to empower themselves and break out of poverty. But just as becoming an employee is harder for women, so is becoming an entrepreneur. Barriers include a lack of access to education or training, and limited access to ICT, market information and finance. Indeed, women-owned SMEs with reliable funding sources are few and far between, in part because land is often required as collateral for credit in a region where women make up a small minority of landholders. Burdensome registration procedures combine with societal prejudice to frustrate women’s entrepreneurial potential.
The good news is that despite these constraints, the number of women entrepreneurs has been increasing in the Asia-Pacific region. Women entrepreneurs in ASEAN countries have been particularly successful. The proportion of firms with women owners stands at nearly 70 per cent in the Philippines, over 60 per cent in Thailand and over 50 per cent in Viet Nam. This has been achieved through gender responsive budgeting, programmes to support SMEs, and strong civil society advocacy to ensure women’s entrepreneurship is prioritised in national policy making. At the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) we want to build on this success and work with countries across policy areas to develop a gender responsive entrepreneurial ecosystem. Four areas are critical to do so.
First, we need to improve women’s access to diverse sources of financing. Women entrepreneurship bonds, impact investment funds and gender responsive FinTech solutions are needed to quicken the pace of change. Combined with measures to improve financial literacy, these solutions should improve access to finance but also reduce transaction costs and support broader growth.
Second, we must improve women’s access to ICT and innovative technologies. Dedicated support is needed for women SME owners wishing to adopt of the latest technology to improve business processes, product promotion and sell into bigger markets. This should be accompanied by lifelong education and training opportunities to enable women to ride successive waves of ICT innovation.
Third, we need to promote a gender responsive policy environment. Public and private institutions should increase the number of women entrepreneurs on advisory boards and the banking sector should be incentivised to serve women better. Streamlined business registration procedures and proactive outreach to potential and existing women entrepreneurs can make a real difference. Women entrepreneur networks, ensuring women’s voices are heard clearly in chambers of commerce, business associations or civil service commissions, must be part of the picture.
Making life easier for women entrepreneurs is
to support women’s empowerment. It can help eliminate
gender inequality, protect a fundamental human right and
bring considerable economic benefits. Gender equality in
Asia would increase per capita income by 70 per cent over
sixty years. This would make a huge contribution to
achieving sustainable development and reducing poverty. On
International Women’s Day, my hope is that governments
across Asia and the Pacific will be entrepreneurial about
achieving equality and give women the support and
opportunities they deserve.
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Shamshad
Akhtar is the Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations
and Executive Secretary of Economic and Social Commission
for Asia and the Pacific
(ESCAP)