Title: Women Contribution to Economy in the SAR Daad Mousa
1Women Contribution to Economy in the SARDaad
Mousa Sawsan Zakzak
2Overview
- Population 51 males, 49 females.
- Illiteracy (15 years old) rate 12.1 males,
26.1 females. - Dr. Najah al-Attar Vice-president (2006).
- Participation in the Cabinet 93 males, 7
females. - Participation in the Peoples Assembly 87.6
males, 12.4 females (2007) - Participation in administrative and
organisational professions 82.2 males, 17.8
females. - Judges 88 males, 12 females.
- Land possession 95 males, 5 females.
- Beneficiaries of the Agency for Combating
Unemployment loans till 31/12/2004 - 1. Household loans 45 males, 55 females.
- 2. Small loans 84 males, 16 females.
3General Environment of Women Activity
- Syria joined the seven major international
conventions, including the CEDAW, with
reservations on Articles 2, 9-2, 15-2, 16-1-C,
16-1-D, 16-1-F, 16-1-G and 16-2. - The Constitution ensures equality among citizens,
and Article 45 states The state guarantees
women all opportunities enabling them to fully
and effectively participate in the political,
social, cultural, and economic life. The state
removes the restrictions that prevent women's
development and participation in building the
socialist Arab society. - Most laws are not discriminative ones,
particularly Labour Laws. - Discriminative laws are the Personal Status,
Penal and Nationality Laws. - No Law of Parties and the Law of Associations is
out-of-date and does not meet the needs of civil
society work development, which affects
negatively the participation in public life,
particularly among women. - Mandatory education stage have been prolonged
until the end of the preparatory education stage.
- Habits and traditions constitute one of the
barriers hindering increasing women participation
in public life.
4Major Indicators of Women Economic Activity
- Unemployment among females increased from 18.5
in 2000 to 22 in 2004, and among males from 7.3
to 10.5. - Women participation in the labour force decreased
from 19.8 in 2000 to 17.3 in 2004, after having
increased in 2002 to 21.4. - Percentage of women working in agriculture
increased from 58.8 in 2000 to 25.5 in 2004,
while in services it increased from 21 to 56.3
for the same period (increased percentage of
female paid-workers but far from economic
decision-making positions) - Contribution of women working in the organised
sector is concentrated in the public sector,
particularly in services, while their
contribution in the mixed and private sector is
concentrated in agriculture.
5Indicators by Employment Status (Organised)
6Indicators by Salary Category (Organised)
7Major Reasons behind those Indicators
- Deflation of government employment.
- Weak private investments due to weak encouraging
environment. - Services sector feminization policies (education,
nursing). - Stereotyped education trend big gender gap in
favor of females in theoretical faculties versus
a gender gap in in favor of males in engineering
and IT faculties. - Women largely tend to public sector due to its
social securities. - Private sector evade applying the laws (a
resignation is signed with the contract). - Poor women accessibility to resources and real
estate collaterals. - Weak supportive services to reproductive role.
- Glass ceiling.
8Non-organised Sector
- Labour Forces Research (2002)
- 60 of the Syrias labour forces works in the
non-formal sector, and most of them are women of
which 56.2 are family unpaid worker. Percentage
of female employers in this sector is only 0.5
of the total female workers in it. Female
self-employed percentage is no more than 11.1,
while female paid workers percentage is 32. - Women contribution in the non-organised sector is
mainly concentrated in agriculture, small and
medium crafts, home services, and home crafts.
9Major Developments before the 10th FYP
- The 9th FYP specified a chapter on Women.
- Set the Syrian Women Advancement Strategy beyond
Beijing (2000-2005). - Rural Women Development Strategy.
- Draft National Population Strategy (2001-2025),
which specified a chapter for Women Empowerment. - Amend Social Insurance Law, which gave women the
right to devise their pension regardless of
husbands situations. - Establish the Syrian Commission for Family
Affairs. - Establish the Syrian Fund for Rural Development
(FIRDOS) and MAWRID to support businesswomen. - Vocational training courses (traditional) by the
General Women Union. - A rising women movement raising the objective of
Women Empowerment in all fields.
10Major Changes in the 10th FYP
- Adopting indicative planning in the context of
social market the State direct investment
activity and market activity, but it does not
dominate of possess it, instead it works to
expand free work area and introduce it
opportunities. - The Plan adopts a participatory approach in
formulating the objectives, with concentration on
the role of non-governmental sectors and civil
society organisations.
11Goals stemming from the Women Empowerment
objective in the 10th FYP
- Raise women percentage in the labour force from
17.3 in 2004 to 21.3 in 2010, 25 in 2020 and
30 in 2025. - Raise women contribution to the crude economic
activity rate from 9.2 in 2004 to 25 in 2020
and to 30 in 2025. - Raise the female/male percentage in the basic
education stage (6-11) from 92 in 2004 to 100
in 2015. - Raise the female/male percentage in the basic
education stage (12-14) from 88 in 2004 to 100
in 2015
12Major Programmes Targeting Women Empowerment
National Women Empowerment and Poverty Reduction
Programme- Training Qualification- Regions
Infrastructure Development- Movable Funds-
Business Incubators.
13Risks
- The new orientation will negatively affect women
economic empowerment at present due to women weak
participation in the private sector as employers,
also because they are the weak point in the
private labour market employment due to their
weak competitiveness stemming from their
qualification, and also due the low level of
social protection of all kinds, including some
discriminative articles in the laws (subsidized
fuel coupons) and the plastic glass ceiling. - The final formulation of the Economic Reform
Programme has not matured yet, which led to some
confusion and non-well considered decisions. - Failure to issue a modern law of associations
that allow the associations to play their role in
women empowerment regarding laws amendment,
training and establishing economic enterprises,
will affect negatively the role of those
associations in women empowerment on all aspects.
- Deflation of government expenditure will affect
social care services of education, health, etc.
(university admission rates and private
education).
14Major Impediments Facing Women in Organised Sector
- Declined government role in employment due to the
deflated government expenditure and lack of
budget allocations to create new job
opportunities. - Women encouraged to work in services sector.
Women are far from the economic decision-making
positions. - No executive policies are adopted to increase
women job opportunities due the belief that
equality by law is sufficient alone to achieve
quality on ground. - Weak opportunities for women to get material and
real estate assets that enable them to get loans
(glass ceiling). - Insufficient qualification and knowledge of
private business, and big marketing problems for
women. - Weak supportive services to the reproductive
role. - Paralyzing collective negotiation principle and
collective work contracts, which deprives groups
of women from getting the commitments for better
work conditions.
15Major Impediments Facing Women in Non-organised
Sector
- Weak statistics regarding work kinds, conditions,
problems and places, and number of female workers
and women contribution to this sector. - Ambiguous economic role of this sector, poor
potentiality to identify income value, no legal
protection and no health social insurance, weak
women awareness of their rights and duties. - Hard work assigned to women in some sectors,
which reflects on their psychological and
physical health. - Social underestimation of women work results in
this sector. - Value and impact of women unpaid work inside and
outside the family are not recognized.
16Proposals
- Retract the CEDAW-related reservation, Amend the
Personal Status, Penal and Nationality Laws to
conform with women current status and to ensure
full legal equality with men and strengthen women
self-confidence, and add new article to the
Labour Law to protect women in private sector. - Build social protection network, and specify
Support Funds to women. - Provide and improve public services supporting
women work. - Improve women conditions regarding training and
qualification. Link training to market needs. Pay
more attention to train women on ICT and
financial, administrative and technical skills.
17Proposals (continued)
- Interpret gender concepts to effective policies
and activities, mainstream gender concept in all
general and sector plans, and adopt
gender-sensitive budgets. - Bridge the gap between rural and urban women
regarding accessibility to resources. - Strengthen gender-based statistics in all
development fields, and conduct researches to
detect the new economic policies impacts. - Activate the employment offices role, and
consider the possibility of adopting temporary
positive discrimination policies. - Amen the Law of Associations to fit the
sustainable human development needs, and to
enable civil organisations to play their role. - Conduct studies on women in non-organised
economy, and adopt special programmes to ensure
women rights and their change to organised
economy. - Conduct researches on women unpaid work and set
criteria to evaluate it.