Women's Labor: A Key Factor in Globalization
by Elmira Nazombe
Center for Women's Global Leadership
The opponents and promoters of globalization have one thing in common:
undervaluing the role of womens labor in the process. Women
and their labor are the unspoken factor in the globalization equation.
As the policy makers of globalization make their decisions, womens
presence as both paid and unpaid labor, as consumers, care givers
and even as community activists is taken for granted and necessary
to the "success " of free market strategies. Womens
labor is the unarticulated ingredient in the World Bank/ IMF formula
for the economic success that includes cutting subsidies
to public services, shifting from food crops to export crops, and
attracting foreign investment with a low wage labor pool. If women
and their labor are central to the processes of globalization, are
they not entitled to the fullness of their rights: the right to
work, the right to social protection, the right to bodily integrity?
Womens Labor Attracts Investors
Transnational investment is a key strategy of globalization. Transnational
investors demand a cheap and flexible labor force. Poor
nations and communities recruit women workers in order to compete
for investors by keeping wages as low as possible and safety requirements
at a
minimum. Women are very often temporary, part-time workers and/or
home-based workers, with little access to benefits, no job security
in a low wage service sector job. This is the sector of largest
job growth in many countries. Where is a woman workers right
to a freely choose a job which pays equal pay for work of equal
value? Where is a woman workers right to safe and healthy
working conditions and just and fair wages that will make possible
an existence worthy of human dignity? Does globalization give her
equal opportunity for employment and protection from unemployment?
There appears to be little or no room for the rights of women workers
under
globalization. But can globalization work if women dont work?
Womens Work Key to Debt Repayment
Failed development strategies have resulted in huge external debts
for many countries. The World Bank and other development donors
make it clear that access to new development funds requires the
repayment of that debt. Some countries have only human resources
to export and therefore encourage hundreds of thousands of women
to leave their own countries to work in other countries. The increasing
poverty in their own country means that overseas work is the only
means available to support their families. But taking this path
to survival means living where one is denied the legal protectiongiven
to citizens and often sexual abuse and intimidation. The remittances
of these migrant workers help provide the much needed hard currency
for the payment of external debt. Can the debt be repaid if women
never work as migrants?
Womens Unpaid Labor Makes Up for Cuts in Social Services
The philosophy of globalization considers the market the supreme
actor in the society, best able to deliver services for the public
welfare.
Therefore, governments must seriously cut back their role in social
services. Structural Adjustment Programs mandate cuts in social
programs in the Third World. In North America and Europe cuts in
public assistance cash payments and subsidized public services like
health care weaken and eliminate the social safety nets. The cuts
are said to be essential to streamline the government costs so that
the nation is better able to be competitive. These policies have
a devastating and disproportionate impact on poor women and children.
These services can be cut because it is assumed that women will
walk farther and wait longer for health service. Policy makers assume
that women will be there to take on the extra burden of sick parents
and children.
What happened to the promise in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights that each citizen can expect that the state will
help them to survive in the times of adversity like unemployment
and old age? That children are entitled to protection regardless
of the status of their birth?
Can communities survive if women are not around to supplement tasks
of social protection?
Even Womens Bodies are Globalization Commodities
Ironically it is the excesses of wealth that globalization has generated
in some parts of the world, especially some parts of Europe and
Asia, the increased demand for a different kind of womens
labor that has led to a dramatic and frightening increase in trafficking
in women for prostitution and sex tourism. Womens bodies become
just another commodity to be bought and sold. Intimidation and physical
and mental violence and abuse are common place. Women have few if
any legal protections or resources. How can the commodification
of womens bodies be stopped and the right to security of person
and the right to bodily integrity proclaimed in international human
rights documents be upheld? Can there be a sex industry without
exploited sex workers?
Valuing Womens Labor Requires Womens Rights
If womens labor is a critical factor in many of the mechanisms
that make globalization work then the impact of those mechanisms
on womens rights have to be taken seriously. The economic
models that underpin globalization need to be transformed not just
to ease womens pain but to give them full respect for the
role they can play in a global system of well-being and justice.
A global economic system in which women are central must be one
in which women enjoy their full human rights.
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