Ahead of G7 Leaders’ Summit, Lobbyists Pressing for Gender Equality Amid COVID-19 Crisis

G7 countries are currently under intense pressure to put in place measures to promote gender equality amid the COVID-19 crisis.

The International Labour Organisation, UN Women and the European Union are among lobbyists campaigning for gender equality. 

Participants at a virtual high-level meeting on COVID-19 agreed that women’s economic empowerment should be part of the crisis response.

The event brought together government ministers, CEOs, business associations, trade unions, civil society, global women’s movements and academia from G7 countries. 

The COVID-19 pandemic has deepened pre-existing inequalities and exposed cracks in social, political and economic systems including access to health services and social protection. 

Women with care responsibilities, informal workers, low-income families, and youth are under particular pressure. Since the crisis began, there has been a significant rise in domestic violence.

G7 countries are therefore being called upon to:

Design and implement strategies to address COVID-19 related gender issues that are aligned with International Labour Standards, to tackle the new challenges posed to the changing world of work.

Expand and invest in universal social protection, including effective and affordable access to quality health care, as well as immediate income and food support.

Ensure that Support to enterprises targets women-owned micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as hard-hit sectors and occupations where women are over-represented.

Provide health care and other front-line workers with adequate occupational safety and health equipment, training and decent working conditions.

Allocate additional resources to address violence against women and girls in COVID-19 national response plans.

Invite businesses to commit to equal pay for work of equal value and zero tolerance against sexual harassment in workplace policy responses.

Encourage financial stakeholders to accelerate the promotion of responsible business conduct and inclusive corporate cultures that promote gender equality as an effective crisis response.

Design economic recovery packages that recognize and place a value on unpaid care work and care jobs and provide adequate levels of quality childcare.

Ensure that girls are included in learning and skills development programmes during and after the crisis.

Collect gender-related statistics and data to inform crisis response and recovery plans.

ILO Director-General, Guy Ryder, says “the COVID-19 pandemic has shown the always essential role of the working heroes of this pandemic. People who are usually invisible, unconsidered, undervalued, even ignored. Health and care workers, cleaners, supermarket cashiers, unpaid carers in their homes and communities – a large majority of women, frequently migrant workers, too often numbered among the working poor and the insecure.”

Ryder is calling for a ‘human-centred’ COVID-19 response and recovery that tackle these injustices and build a ‘better normal ’.

UN Women Executive Director, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, is saying that the pandemic “has caused a crisis reaching far beyond health, challenging fundamental aspects of how we have previously arranged our social and economic structures. Women earn less, save less, hold less secure jobs, and are more likely to be employed in the informal economy, with less access to social protection. 

‘’I call on leaders at the virtual G7 Summit to explicitly recognize this and ensure that their COVID-19 response intentionally, strongly and permanently redresses these long-standing inequalities to create inclusive, equal, and more resilient societies.”

Head of the European Commission’s Service for Foreign Policy Instruments (FPI), Hilde Hardeman, says: “We can say that the COVID-19 crisis is gender-biased looking at its impact on women-owned businesses, on the burden women are facing during the crisis, at the increase of gender-based violence, but the COVID crisis is also an opportunity to rebuild back better. Our efforts should now concentrate on putting women at the centre of the recovery.”

A summary of the discussion will be made available in advance of the virtual G7 Leaders’ Summit taking place from this coming June 10-12.

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