The Impact of COVID-19 On Women: Policy Brief
The Impact of COVID-19 On Women: Policy Brief
The Impact of COVID-19 On Women: Policy Brief
The Impact of
COVID-19
on Women
9 APRIL 2020
Introduction
The year 2020, marking the twenty-fifth > As the COVID-19 pandemic deepens eco-
anniversary of the Beijing Platform for nomic and social stress coupled with
Action, was intended to be ground-break- restricted movement and social isolation
ing for gender equality. Instead, with the measures, gender-based violence is
spread of the COVID-19 pandemic even the increasing exponentially. Many women
limited gains made in the past decades are are being forced to ‘lockdown’ at home
at risk of being rolled back. The pandemic with their abusers at the same time that
is deepening pre-existing inequalities, services to support survivors are being
exposing vulnerabilities in social, political disrupted or made inaccessible.
> While early reports reveal more men COVID-19 is not only a challenge for global
are dying as a result of COVID-19, the health systems, but also a test of our human
health of women generally is adversely spirit. Recovery must lead to a more equal world
impacted through the reallocation of that is more resilient to future crises. Fiscal
resources and priorities, including sex- stimulus packages and emergency measures
ual and reproductive health services. to address public health gaps have been put in
place in many countries to mitigate the impacts
> Unpaid care work has increased, with children 1
of COVID-19. It is crucial that all national
out-of-school, heightened care needs of older responses place women and girls - their inclu-
persons and overwhelmed health services. sion, representation, rights, social and economic
1 DESA Policy Brief #58, “COVID-19: Addressing the social crisis through fiscal stimulus plans”, https://www.un.org/development/desa/dpad/
publication/un-desa-policy-brief-58-covid-19-addressing-the-social-crisis-through-fiscal-stimulus-plans/
The impact of COVID-19 across the global econ- services sector, including retail, hospitality and
omy will be profound. Already, as described in tourism, where women are overrepresented.
greater detail in the policy brief ‘Shared respon-
sibility, Global Solidarity’ on the socioeconomic The situation is worse in developing economies
impacts of COVID-19, markets and supply chains where the vast majority of women’s employ-
have been disrupted, businesses are required to ment – 70 per cent – is in the informal econ-
close or scale back operations, and millions have omy with few protections against dismissal
2
or will lose their jobs and livelihoods. ILO has or for paid sick leave and limited access to
estimated that full or partial lockdown measures social protection. To earn a living these work-
now affect almost 2.7 billion workers, represent- ers often depend on public space and social
ing around 81% of the world’s workforce, while the interactions, which are now being restricted
5
IMF projects a significant contraction of global to contain the spread of the pandemic.
3
output in 2020. COVID-19 is lurching the world
The Ebola virus showed that quarantines can
economy towards a global recession, which will
4 significantly reduce women’s economic and live-
be strikingly different from past recessions.
lihood activities, increasing poverty rates, and
6
Emerging evidence on the impact of COVID-19 sug- exacerbating food insecurity. In Liberia where
gests that women’s economic and productive lives approximately 85 per cent of daily market traders
will be affected disproportionately and differently are women, Ebola prevention measures (which
from men. Across the globe, women earn less, included travel restrictions) severely impacted
7
save less, hold less secure jobs, are more likely to women’s livelihoods and economic security.
be employed in the informal sector. They have less Moreover, while men’s economic activity returned
access to social protections and are the majority of to pre-crisis levels shortly after preventative mea-
single-parent households. Their capacity to absorb sures subsided, the impacts on women’s economic
economic shocks is therefore less than that of men. security and livelihoods lasted much longer.
As women take on greater care demands at From past experience and emerging data, it is
home, their jobs will also be disproportionately possible to project that the impacts of the COVID-
affected by cuts and lay-offs. Such impacts 19 global recession will result in a prolonged dip
risk rolling back the already fragile gains made in women’s incomes and labor force participation,
in female labor force participation, limiting with compounded impacts for women already
women’s ability to support themselves and living in poverty. For those who, as a result of
their families, especially for female-headed recent economic growth managed to escape
households. In many countries, the first round from extreme poverty, they are likely to fall back
of layoffs has been particularly acute in the into this most vulnerable of situations once again.
2 Shared Responsibility, Global Solidarity: Responding To The Socio-Economic Impacts Of Covid-19 March 2020
https://www.un.org/Sites/Un2.Un.Org/Files/Sg_Report_Socio-Economic_Impact_Of_Covid19.Pdf
3 IMF, add refs https://blogs.imf.org/2020/04/06/an-early-view-of-the-economic-impact-of-the-pandemic-in-5-charts/ [The IMF will release
its global economic outlook only on 14 April]
4 https://www.forbes.com/sites/miltonezrati/2020/03/18/heading-off-the-covid-19-recession/#651eba9a28e6
5 Globally, informal employment is a greater source of employment for men (63.0 per cent) than for women (58.1 per cent), but in low and
lower-middle income countries, a higher proportion of women are in informal employment than men. In Africa for example, 90% of employed
women are in informal employment compared to 83% of men. (https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---dgreports/---dcomm/docu-
ments/publication/wcms_626831.pdf, pages 20-21)
6 Ministry of Social Welfare, Gender and Children’s Affairs, UN Women, Oxfam, Statistics Sierra Leone (2014). Multisector Impact Assessment
of Gender Dimensions of the Ebola Virus Disease
7 https://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2014/11/in-liberia-mobile-banking-to-help-ebola-affected-women-traders
8 UN Women calculations based on Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker: https://www.bsg.ox.ac.uk/research/research-projects/
oxford-covid-19-government-response-tracker
9 http://www.ugogentilini.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Country-social-protection-COVID-responses_April3-1.pdf
> Use women’s networks and civil society policies. We can advise governments on what
organisations, including microfinance and measures can be implemented with low trans-
savings groups, to communicate on benefits. action costs, and on how to target programs to
provide income for women that are disproportion-
> Integrate a gender assessment in all ately represented in sectors affected by COVID-19
country assessments to understand quarantine and lockdown policies. In so doing, the
the impact of COVID-19 on women UN can advise governments on the most effective
and girls, including economic impact, ways to put cash in women’s hands, including
and how to address it effectively. through expanding cash transfer programs, advise
on conditionalities, and propose how programs
Direct support to informal workers and women- can leverage mobile banking to ensure women
led businesses is especially critical: Financial can both access and control the use of funds.
support needs to target hard-hit women-led The UN can support the design of fiscal stimu-
enterprises and businesses in feminized sectors lus programs that are well-targeted to women.
with subsidized and state-backed loans, tax and
social security payment deferrals and exemptions.
Governments could, for instance, support income
replacement measures to informal workers (as in
Health pandemics can make it more difficult some areas, women have less access to per-
for women and girls to receive treatment sonal protective equipment or correctly sized
and health services. This is compounded by equipment. Despite these numbers, women are
multiple or intersecting inequalities, such as often not reflected in national or global deci-
ethnicity, socioeconomic status, disability, sion-making on the response to COVID-19.
age, race, geographic location and sexual
orientation, among others which influences Impacts on sexual and reproductive health:
access and decision-making to critical health The provision of sexual and reproductive health
services and information about COVID-19. services, including maternal health care and
gender-based violence related services, are cen-
Women and girls have unique health needs, but tral to health, rights and well-being of women
they are less likely to have access to quality and girls. The diversion of attention and critical
health services, essential medicines and vac- resources away from these provisions may result
cines, maternal and reproductive health care, or in exacerbated maternal mortality and morbid-
insurance coverage for routine and catastrophic ity, increased rates of adolescent pregnancies,
health costs, especially in rural and marginalized HIV and sexually transmitted diseases. In Latin
communities. Restrictive social norms and gen- America and the Caribbean it is estimated that
der stereotypes can also limit women’s ability to an additional 18 million women will lose regular
access health services. All of this has particular access to modern contraceptives, given the
11
impacts during a widespread health crisis. current context of COVID-19 pandemics.
10 WHO (2019). Gender equity in the health workforce: Analysis of 104 Countries: https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/311314/
WHO-HIS-HWF-Gender-WP1-2019.1-eng.pdf?ua=1
11 Out-of-Pocket Spending for Contraceptives in Latin America. UNFPA, Latin America and Caribbean Regional Office, March 2020
12 https://www.unfpa.org/featured-publication/women-and-young-persons-disabilities
The COVID-19 global crisis has made starkly and communities is invariably increasing by
visible the fact that the world’s formal econ- the day. Those affected by COVID-19 patients
omies and the maintenance of our daily lives may be released early to make space for oth-
are built on the invisible and unpaid labor of ers but will still require care and assistance
women and girls. With children out of school, at home. Non-COVID-19 related health and
intensified care needs of older persons and social services may be scaled back, meaning
ill family members, and overwhelmed health that families need to provide greater support to
services, demands for care work in a COVID- members who suffer other illnesses, including
19 world have intensified exponentially. chronic ones. Women are at the forefront of
the COVID-19 response as the default unpaid
The unpaid care economy is a critical mainstay family caregivers and the majority of unpaid
of the COVID-19 response: There are gross or poorly paid community health workers.
imbalances in the gender distribution of unpaid
care work. Before COVID-19 became a universal School closures have put additional strain
pandemic, women were doing three times as and demand on women and girls: According
much unpaid care and domestic work as men. to UNESCO, 1.52 billion students (87 percent)
This unseen economy has real impacts on the and over 60 million teachers are now home as
formal economy, and women’s lives. In Latin COVID-19 school closures expand. As formal
America the value of unpaid work is estimated and informal supply of childcare declines, the
to represent between 15,2 percent (Ecuador) demand for unpaid childcare provision is fall-
13
and 25,3 percent (Costa Rica) of GDP. ing more heavily on women, not only because
of the existing structure of the workforce, but
In the context of the pandemic, the increased also because of social norms. This will con-
demand for care work is deepening already strain their ability to work, particularly when
existing inequalities in the gender division of jobs cannot be carried out remotely. The
labor. The less visible parts of the care economy lack of childcare support is particularly prob-
are coming under increasing strain but remain lematic for essential workers who have care
unaccounted for in the economic response. responsibilities. Evidence for the US shows
that women not only hold 78 percent of all
Health care: As hospitals and healthcare
hospital jobs, but also 70 percent of pharmacy
centres struggle to stem the tide of COVID-19 14
jobs and 51 percent of grocery store roles.
infections, the healthcare burden on families
13 ECLAC (2019) Repository of information on time use in Latin America and the Caribbean, available at https://oig.cepal.org/sites/default/
files/2019-10_repositorio_uso_del_tiempo_eng.pdf
14 U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics, Current Employment Statistics - CES (National), Employment and Earnings Table B-5b, available at: https://
www.bls.gov/web/empsit/ceseeb5b.htm (February 2020).
15 United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2019). World Population Prospects 2019, Online Edition:
https://population.un.org/wpp/
16 UNICEF, Plan International, UN Women (2020). A new era for girls: taking stock of 25 years of progress: https://www.unicef.org/
media/65586/file/A-new-era-for-girls-2020.pdf
17 Elson
18 Alon, T.; Doepke, M.; Jane Olmstead-Rumsey, Y.; and Tertilt, M., 2020.”The Impact of COVID-19 on Gender Equality”:
http://faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~mdo738/research/COVID19_Gender_March_2020.pdf
On 5 April, the Secretary-General called for abusers are exploiting the inability of women
a global ceasefire and an end to all violence to call for help or escape; women risk being
everywhere so that we can focus our atten- thrown out on the street with nowhere to go. At
tion and resources on stopping this pandemic. the same time, support services are struggling.
But violence is not just on the battlefield. It is Judicial, police and health services that are the
also in homes. Violence against women and first responders for women are overwhelmed,
girls is increasing globally as the COVID-19 have shifted priorities, or are otherwise unable
pandemic combines with economic and social to help. Civil society groups are affected by lock-
stresses and measures to restrict contact and down or reallocation of resources. Some domes-
movement. Crowded homes, substance abuse, tic violence shelters are full; others have had to
limited access to services and reduced peer close or have been repurposed as health centres.
support are exacerbating these conditions.
Before the pandemic, it was estimated that one It is important for national response
in three women will experience violence during plans to prioritize support for women
their lifetimes. Many of these women are now by implementing measures that have
trapped in their homes with their abusers. proven to be effective. These include:
While it is too early for comprehensive data, > Integrating prevention efforts and ser-
there are already many deeply concerning vices to respond to violence against
reports of increased violence against women women into COVID-19 response plans;
around the world, with surges being reported
> Designating domestic violence shelters
in many cases of upwards of 25% in coun-
as essential services and increasing
tries with reporting systems in place. In some
resources to them, and to civil society
countries reported cases have doubled.
groups on the front line of response;
These numbers are also likely to reflect
> Expanding the capacity of shelters for
only the worst cases. Without access to
victims of violence by re-purposing other
private spaces, many women will struggle
19 spaces, such as empty hotels, or edu-
to make a call or to seek help online.
cation institutions, to accommodate
Alongside the increase in numbers, violence quarantine needs, and integrating con-
against women is taking on new complexity: siderations of accessibility for all;
exposure to COVID-19 is being used as a threat;
19 Equally, as individuals spend more time online, there are concerns about rising gender-based abuse in digital spaces.
The COVID-19 pandemic poses devastating risks The effective implementation of the women,
for women and girls in fragile and conflict-af- peace and security agenda needs to remain a
fected contexts. Disruptions to critical health, priority through this period. Security Council res-
humanitarian and development programmes olution 2242 (2015) was in fact one of the first
can have life and death consequences where Council resolutions to recognize health pandem-
health systems may already be overwhelmed ics as part of the peace and security landscape,
or largely non-existent. More than 50 per cent and highlight the need for the principles of pre-
of all maternal deaths occur from complica- vention, protection and equal participation and
tions in pregnancy and childbirth in countries leadership of women to be part of all responses.
affected by fragility, further impacts on the
health sector are likely to drive this number Lastly, the global pandemic has led to a signifi-
up even further. In settings across the con- cant increase in restrictions on the freedom of
flict landscape, women – be they displaced, movement of people worldwide and worrisome
refugee, rural, poor or otherwise marginalised reports on the misuse of emergency measures
– face isolation, the concerted spread of mis- to further erode human rights and the rule of
information and a lack of access to critical law, as will be detailed in a forthcoming policy
technologies. More detail on the humanitarian brief on the Human Rights Impacts of COVID-
impacts of COVID-19 were provided in the
22 19. This has led to an adverse impact on civic
space and the ability of communities and
Restrictions on the movements of police and individuals to exercise their right to peaceful
security forces can create a rule of law vac- assembly and freedom of expression. Women
uum in remote communities and increase leaders and activists continue to bear the brunt
the prevalence of sexual and gender-based of harassment and attacks both on and offline.
violence and the targeted killings of women The prospects of a long-term global recession
human rights defenders. The shift to online raise serious concerns over how these protec-
discourse also risks narrowing the space for tion gaps and human rights restrictions will
women’s civil society organizations to operate be addressed. Post-pandemic recovery will
and to undertake urgent advocacy and ser- hopefully lead to an expansion of rights and
vice delivery in support of women’s rights. participation of women in public affairs so that
we are more resilient to future such crises.
22 GLOBAL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN COVID-19 UNITED NATIONS COORDINATED APPEAL APRIL – DECEMBER 2020
https://www.unocha.org/sites/unocha/files/Global-Humanitarian-Response-Plan-COVID-19.pdf
A pandemic amplifies and heightens all existing Instead, every COVID-19 response plans,
inequalities. These inequalities in turn shape and every recovery package and budgeting
who is affected, the severity of that impact, and of resources, needs to address the gender
our efforts at recovery. The COVID-19 pandemic impacts of this pandemic. This means: (1)
and its social and economic impacts have cre- including women and women’s organiza-
ated a global crisis unparalleled in the history tions at the heart of the COVID-19 response;
of the United Nations—and one which requires (2) transforming the inequities of unpaid
a whole-of-society response to match its sheer care work into a new, inclusive care economy
scale and complexity. But this response, that works for everyone; and (3) designing
whether at the national or international level, will socio-economic plans with an intentional focus
be significantly weakened if it does not factor on the lives and futures of women and girls.
in the ways in which inequalities have made
all of us more vulnerable to the impacts of the Putting women and girls at the centre of
crisis. Or, if we choose to simply repeat past economies will fundamentally drive better
policies and fail to use this moment to rebuild and more sustainable development out-
more equal, inclusive and resilient societies. comes for all, support a more rapid recovery,
and place us back on a footing to achieve
the Sustainable Development Goals.