City
Epaper

Women’s employment rate in urban India jumps 10 pc in six years: Report

By IANS | Updated: March 7, 2025 12:16 IST

Chennai, March 7 Women's employment in urban India has jumped 10 per cent in the last six years ...

Open in App

Chennai, March 7 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 the International Women’s Day 2025, on Friday.

The white 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 mothers with access to remote work -- 86 per cent report spending up to three workday hours on childcare while working. 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.

“While women’s workforce participation in urban India is rising, it is not yet translating into true gender parity in earnings, career growth, and domestic responsibilities. To drive real change, first, we need more employment opportunities for all,” said Dr. Vidya Mahambare, Professor of Economics and Director, Great Lakes Institute of Management.

She also called for "structural reforms in childcare policies, flexible work arrangements, and a shift in societal norms that continue to burden women disproportionately.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsSuper Cup: Punjab shoot Bengaluru out to enter semis

InternationalBahrain Interior Minister receives Medal of Highest Order from INTERPOL President

InternationalUS: Democrats urge Trump to end "Republican-led govt shutdown", seek bipartisan talks

InternationalIn two separate incidents Israeli forces eliminate terrorists in Gaza

NationalCourts are not just buildings but symbols of democratic values: CJI Gavai

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPM Modi congratulates Amul and IFFCO for securing top global rankings for cooperatives

TechnologyPiyush Goyal optimistic about creating more ‘successful Kiwi–Bharat stories’

TechnologyDelhivery slips into losses despite posting 17 pc revenue rise in Q2 FY26

TechnologyMahindra’s commercial EV manufacturer surpasses 3 lakh sales milestone

TechnologyScience, R&D, advanced materials key pillars for Viksit Bharat 2047: CSIR