CHENNAI
WOMEN’S employment in
urban India has jumped 10 per
cent in the last six years (2017-
18 to 2023-24), according to a
report, ahead of International
Women’s Day 2025, on Friday.
TheWhite Paper launched by
Great Lakes Institute of
Management, Chennai, showed
that urban women in their forties have the highest employment rate among women in
urban India -- 38.3 per cent in
2023-24. It also warned of pressing challenges including the
underutilisation of educated
women’s skills and the looming risk of a diversity backlash.
More than 89 million urban
Indian women still remained
out of the labour market during 2023-24, said the report.
Factors such as caregiving
responsibilities, lack of flexible
work arrangements, and commuting challenges continue to
prevent many highly qualified
women from fully participating
in the economy. Further, in a
concerning trend, young male
unemployment in urban India
outpaced women’s (10 per cent
vs 7.5 per cent for ages 20-24).
The findings also highlighted gender gaps even in highly
educated households. Even
among dual-income, highly
educated couples, gender disparities remain stark.
In 62 per cent of such families, husbands earn more,
despite equal educational
qualifications. Additionally,
wives continue to take on the
primary responsibility for
household work in 41 per cent
of homes, compared to just 2
per cent of husbands.
Meanwhile, the balance
remains elusive for urban
motherswith access toremote
work -- 86 per cent report
spending up to three workday
hoursonchildcarewhileworking. Yet only 44 per cent feel
they have adequate support.
This reinforces the need for
stronger workplace policies
that acknowledge and address
the realities of working mothers.“Whilewomen’sworkforce
participation in urban India is
rising, it is not yet translating
into true genderparityin earnings, career growth, and
domestic responsibilities. To
drive realchange, first,weneed
more employmentopportunities for all,” said Dr. Vidya
Mahambare, Professor of
EconomicsandDirector,Great
Lakes Institute of
Management.
She also called for “structuralreformsinchildcarepolicies, flexible work arrangements, and a shift in societal
norms thatcontinue toburden
women disproportionately.”