SEMINAR REPORT
Moderator: Ravi Agrawal, Managing Editor, Foreign Policy Magazine
Speaker: Kristalina Georgieva, Managing Director, International Monetary Fund
In a one-on-one conversation with Ravi Agrawal from the Foreign Policy Magazine, Managing Director of the IMF, Kristalina Georgieva, talked about how improved gender parity would lead to better economic outcomes for all, and what the Fund can do to help.
Key Points:
- The role of Fund. Georgieva argued that the IMF has a role in bringing forward analytical work on the effects of gender inequality. IMF research shows that countries cannot fully prosper without tapping into all its talent. For example, Sweden’s GDP would be 4 percent higher if women fully participated in the economy on equal terms, and in Senegal GDP would be 8 percent higher. She also added that research shows that companies are more profitable when they have more women on their boards, because diverse teams contribute to better decisions.
- Unpaid work. In her first blog on imf.org, Georgieva cited recent IMF analytical work which shows that if unpaid work was counted, global GDP would increase by 35-40 percent. Women do more unpaid work than men, on average 2.5 hours more per day. However, the margin differs significantly across countries: in Norway, women do 20 percent more work, in Japan it is 380 percent, in Pakistan as much as 1000 percent. The unequal distribution of unpaid work is not only unfair, it is also inefficient since you have high-skilled women doing unskilled work.
- How to promote change. Georgieva stressed that while political will is needed to take concrete steps, cultures take time to change. As an example of concrete action, she mentioned India where measures had been taken to improve transit security for women, thus allowing more women to go to work. Other practical measures include taxation that favors female labor force participation and child care provision. In response to a question on what men can do to help, Georgieva said that it is important that men recognize the historical injustice and that we now are working to correct it. When asked by a participant in the audience about legislation of quotas of women in boards, she spoke in favor of quotas, noting that while they are not a perfect solution, they constitute a practical means to achieve concrete change.
Quotes:
“Christine Lagarde broke the glass ceiling, so it was easier for me to get through. See…I have no cuts.” Kristalina Georgieva
“Inequalities erode societies.” Kristalina Georgieva
Contributor: Emelie Mannefred