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“In the beginning, woman was truly the sun. An authentic person.” -Raicho Hiratsuka, Japanese writer and feminist

“Today more than ever, the global economy needs precisely this kind of radiant sun—to provide light and nourishment. To provide healing. To dry out the swamps of poverty and unrest...I urge everyone—all women and men of goodwill—to dare the difference and bet on women. I promise you this: you will not be disappointed. For when women shine like the sun, their radiance will be forever undimmed.”-Christine Lagarde, Managing director, the International Monetary Fund

 

Meghanomics is all about Women’s Empowerment

‘Recent trends are perfectly illustrated by the Harry and Meghan match. He struggled at school and went off to join the army rather than go to university; she got a double major in theatre and international relations and has had a successful acting career. If the monarchy were abolished and the members of the royal family had to fend for themselves, there’s little doubt which of the couple would be the more reliable breadwinner.’-Photo:bing.com

“We will never achieve any of the Sustainable Development Goals without overcoming the discrimination and poverty that stunts the lives of girls and women from one generation to the next. We must work at all levels, from grassroots to global leaders, to put equity and inclusion at the heart of every policy so that all girls, whatever their circumstances, go to school, stay in school and become empowered citizens.”- Irina Bokova, UNESCO Director General

Economic Empowerment

Photo: unwomen.org

‘Investing in women’s economic empowerment sets a direct path towards gender equality, poverty eradication and inclusive economic growth. Women make enormous contributions to economies, whether in businesses, on farms, as entrepreneurs or employees, or by doing unpaid care work at home.

But they also remain disproportionately affected by poverty, discrimination and exploitation. Gender discrimination means women often end up in insecure, low-wage jobs, and constitute a small minority of those in senior positions. It curtails access to economic assets such as land and loans. It limits participation in shaping economic and social policies. And, because women perform the bulk of household work, they often have little time left to pursue economic opportunities.’-UN WOMEN

I was prompted to write this Blog, after reading an excellent article by Larry Elliott, the Guardian's economics editor. Writing in the Guardian on Wednesday 23 May 2018, he suggests that, ‘Meghanomics’ can be the answer to Britain’s productivity crisis. He notes that, Meghan Markle-Duchess of Sussex- wants to champion female empowerment.

As Elliott notes:

‘There’s nothing quite like a royal wedding to get the British to part with their cash, so in one respect the idea that the new Duchess of Sussex could be good news for the economy is a statement of the blindingly obvious. Retailers have had a tough time recently, and a bit of Meghanmania was just what they needed to get the tills ringing.

Interest in the newest member of the royal family will linger longer than the feelgood factor. People are clearly fascinated by her backstory and take notice of what she thinks. Role models are important, and just as it matters that Christine Lagarde sees fighting for women’s rights as a vital part of her job as head of the International Monetary Fund, so it matters that the Duchess of Sussex calls herself a feminist and wants to champion female empowerment. Feminism is an economic issue.’...

More on Elliott’s article later. Now, I very much wish to share with you, something a bit more personal, more heartfelt:

I, too, am feminist and proud of it! Yes, I, too, believe that in order to build a better world, we must promote ‘Women’s Economic Empowerment’, and thus, I, too, support ‘Meghanomics’.

Let me explain a bit more, by quoting a few excerpts from a Blog I had written in February 2015, very relevant to today’s discussion:

“Economic Woman”: The Time is Now

Photo: africanexecutive.com

‘It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we can expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest When Adam Smith wrote that all our actions stem from self-interest and the world turns because of financial gain he brought to life 'economic man'. Selfish and cynical, economic man has dominated our thinking ever since and his influence has spread from the market to how we shop, work and date. But every night Adam Smith's mother served him his dinner, not out of self-interest but out of love. Today, our economics focuses on self-interest and excludes all other motivations. It disregards the unpaid work of mothering, caring, cleaning and cooking. It insists that if women are paid less, then that's because their labour is worth less - how could it be otherwise? Economics has told us a story about how the world works and we have swallowed it, hook, line and sinker. Now it's time to change the story.’..Continue to read   

And now returning to the Elliott’s article in the Guardian:

…’Feminism is an economic issue.

‘Plenty of explanations have been canvassed for Britain’s recent woeful productivity record: too little investment, poor infrastructure, insufficient spending on research and development, too many low-paid, low-skilled jobs, weak management and a long tail of under–performing firms among them. Strangely, the one that gets the least attention is the failure to utilise fully the skills of the available workforce.

Women outperform men in higher and further education, yet their talents are being wasted. Women and men are not equal partners in the workplace and the gap between them remains large despite some progress in recent decades. A report by McKinsey in 2015 said that advancing women’s equality could add $12tn a year to the world economy – equivalent to the economies of Britain, Germany and Japan combined. As David Coates says in his new book, Flawed Capitalism, an enormous pool of human capital is being squandered because of sexist cultures, glass ceilings and economic structures that make it hard for women.

The evidence for this starts right at the top of British society. Five out of 21 permanent secretaries in Whitehall are women; there is one women out of nine members on the Bank of England committee that sets interest rates; there has never been a female chancellor or cabinet secretary. When Moya Greene steps down from the Post Office in the summer, there will be just six women running FTSE 100 companies​.

The Labour governments from 1997 to 2010 sought to address gender issues in the economy in a number of ways: through the tax and benefits system, by introducing a national minimum wage, by providing financial help with childcare, and by making maternity pay more generous.

Many of those gains have been rolled back over the past eight years. Tax credits have been made less generous; Sure Start centres have been closed; and job cuts in the public sector have disproportionately affected women. Austerity has had a gender dimension. Meanwhile, the way in which workplaces are organised is unfit for purpose in an age in which brains are more important than brawn.

Childcare remains a big problem. The gender pay gap will never be closed while women take most of the responsibility for childcare, because they are out of the workplace in their 20s and 30s and lose out on promotion to men who are often less qualified to do the job.

Many parents make the choice to look after their young children, but incentives for women to get back to work quickly after having children are weak, because expensive childcare combined with low wages means that the sums simply don’t add up. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development has said the cost of childcare as a share of wages is higher in the UK than in any other rich developed nation. As a consequence, many women take the decision to look after their young children rather than return to work.

There is an obvious solution to this problem – a nationwide system of universal free childcare that would start from when a child is six months old. On the face of it, this would be an expensive commitment, although the Women’s Budget Group​ – which scrutinises the gender implications of government policy – says it would pay for itself.

Upfront costs are certainly high – £33bn a year if the staff hired to run the scheme were paid at current wage rates, and £55bn a year if they were paid the same salaries as primary school teachers.

But this assumes that all parents would take up the offer immediately, which they almost certainly wouldn’t. A more realistic cost would be £28bn a year, which would be offset by the additional revenue the exchequer could expect to get. More women would be working, so income tax and national insurance receipts would go up. The new entrants to the workforce would have more money to spend and so extra VAT would be paid. Finally, the bill for benefits would go down. In all, the Women’s Budget Group says this adds up to just under £27bn a year.

If the government plumped for the more expensive £55bn a year option, it could raise £28bn by introducing a single rate of pension tax relief at about 25%, postponing further cuts to corporation tax, unfreezing fuel and alcohol duties, and reallocating the money it already spends on childcare and early education.

The wider economy would also benefit because better-educated and better-qualified women could be expected to make smarter decisions than men, if only they were in a position to make them.

Recent trends are perfectly illustrated by the Harry and Meghan match. He struggled at school and went off to join the army rather than go to university; she got a double major in theatre and international relations and has had a successful acting career. If the monarchy were abolished and the members of the royal family had to fend for themselves, there’s little doubt which of the couple would be the more reliable breadwinner.’

Read the original article: The answer to Britain’s productivity crisis? Meghanomics

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