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World Bank: Gender inequality still prevalent in PH

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MANILA, Philippines—Filipino working women are paid just 76 percent of what their male counterparts get, indicating that despite growth and development there is still a significant gap in opportunities for men and women in the Philippines, according to a World Bank report.

The phenomenal economic progress achieved by East Asia and Pacific nations has not removed gender inequality, and countries in the region, including the Philippines, need to put in place policies that would address the issue, said the World Bank report, titled “Toward Gender Equality in East Asia and the Pacific,” released in Manila the other day.

Women in the Philippines are paid less than men for doing similar work, earning 76 cents for every dollar that men earn, the report said. Filipino women are also more likely to work in small firms and in the informal sector, and in lower-paid occupations, it said.

The Washington, D.C.-based development agency said that gender equality, while a very good goal in its own right, is also smart economics because it leads to higher productivity and incomes, which would in turn lead to poverty reduction. It would also result in better investments and improved decision-making quality, it said.

Motoo Konishi, World Bank country director for the Philippines, said during the launch of the report that East Asian economies have been growing rapidly, and this has had a lot of positive impact.

But based on the report, gender balance is not one of the things that automatically comes with an improving economy, he said.

“What it says also is unless you change the policies, gender imbalance does not change. You cannot sit and wait. The growth path will not change the gender gap. That is they have to adopt policies that are different to make sure that growth benefits everybody,” Konishi said.

“Economic growth alone cannot do it. Policies must be put in place,” said Ximena del Carpio, senior World Bank economist and co-author of the report.

Konishi said the Philippines is in many ways advanced in gender and development. However, there are still problems that need to be addressed, he said.

The report showed a disparity in terms of opportunity to manage enterprises in the Philippines. Only about 30 percent of medium-sized enterprises have female managers, while just about 20 percent of large enterprises have female managers.


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Tags: East Asia , economic progress , gender equality , Pacific nations , World Bank , World Bank report

  • jurbinsky77

    Is this true?

    I do not know a particular example where men are paid higher than women even as they do the same job. Can anyone please enlighten me? I’ve been away for a decade, there could be changes that I am not knowledgeable of.

    I want to know on what basis the creator of the report wrote her report.

    This is a problem that we need to address, anyone can make stories blaming the Filipino.

    For example, in 1989, a French cosmetic surgeon prepared an article for a local paper in Manama, Bahrain. He expounded on the importance of dealing with professional, experienced cosmetic surgeon, “unlike in the Asian countries, particularly the Philippines, where horror stories of misaligned nose, botched breast implant, serious allergy reaction, etc, have become regularly uncontrolled issues.”

    I saw that draft article while helping the secretary use Wordstar. I had all the time preparing a riposte to reprove that irresponsible publication of a product of imagination. At the time, there were only few practicing cosmetic surgeons in the Philippines, only in the mid-90s an explosion of wannabes came out to share the proverbial pie. And only later in the 90s, that Manila had to contend with explosions of complaints about wrong cosmetic surgeries.

    In the early years of the last decade, there was news item in the Toronto dailies and in a TV station about a suspected sex offender who was described as a Filipino by the field reporter. Usually sex offenders are not described based on race or culture, but this one “has been positively identified”. For three days CP25 had the news appear as marquee in the daily broadcast. Then suddenly, the news disappeared without any followup item, if charges have been filed or the suspect was caught or that it was just a case of a false news article by an over-eager Pakistani or Indian reporter. The two biggest papers in Toronto are owned a muslim Pakistani.

    In 2003, there was a SAR epidemic, there appeared a news snippet that the explosion of SAR was due to a Filipino religious fellowship whose members traveled from Toronto to Montreal and the US. The same TV station had a run with a marquee that a backlash against the Filipinos would happen due to fast SAR infection. Of course, the reporter was just overzealous in demonizing the Filipinos. What backlash?

    Prior to that “investigative reporting” about the source and the vector of SAR infection, the same TV station broadcast was about the first fatalities, 1 Filipino doctor and 1 Filipina nurse. The news writer was too lazy to write that those 2 Filipino-Canadian sacrificed their lives for being at the forefront in the fight against SAR.

    My point is because of this propensity of the Filipinos to be involved in the commission and perpetuation of corruption, the whole world has lost its respect for the Philippines. It easy for any Tom, Dick and Harry to associate anything bad and undesirable to the Philippines and the Filipino people. And one other weakness of the people is to blame the victim or the prosecutor instead of the perpetrator of injustice.

    Proof 1: Check how many cursed and called Pacquiao names after the Las Vegas debacle.

    Proof 2: Review the comments of some posters on Justice Carpio, Carpio-Morales, de Lima, Henares, Drilon and President Aquino.

    By the way, Eric Spoelstra made a booboo when he was asked why he always compare basketball to boxing. Eric opened up with the fact the everybody knows that he is a fan of Pacquiao and therefore it is easy for him to see analogy between basketball and boxing. There was nary a clap and I thought I heard hisses from the crowd. Eric must have created some enemies instantly.

  • pilipino

    Those women who want gender equality, come and apply as laborers because I need 20 magbuhat ng sako-sakong semento at graba. Bigyan ko kayo ng equal salary pag ang job performance nyo ay katulad ng output ng men laborers ko. Demand equality if you perform the job just as men do. At bawal mag-leave pag may regla ha because menstruation is not an illness at alangan naman mahinto ang trabaho for 1 week dahil hintayin kong matapos ang regla, di pwede. Time is costly.



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