Stand up & speak out: 70% poor are women
2007/02/20 14:25:00 GMT+0530
Seventy percent of the world's poor and sixtyfive percent of the
world's illiterate are women. On March 08, 2007, women's groups all
over the world seek gender equality to end poverty. Year 2007 is also
important as it is the mid-way year for achieving the Millenium
Development Goals (MDGs).
Of the 1 billion people who live on less than $1 a
day, 70 per cent are women. Women make up 65 percent of the world’s
illiterate. Although women do two thirds of the work in the world, the
rate of paid employment for women is two thirds that of men.
Women
hold less than 6 percent of senior management positions in the world.
These facts highlight how gender discrimination and inequality extends
from education to the workplace and beyond and how the feminization of
poverty is a reality.
2007 is an historical year in the
struggle against poverty and inequality. It marks the halfway point in
achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). In spite of
governments’ commitments to the MDGs, poverty continues to expand and
it affects mostly women and children.
In spite of increasing
wealth indicating growing global economic indicators, women and
children are the ones with the highest numbers of illiteracy, lack of
primary education, school drop outs, maternal and infant mortality,
malnutrition, anaemia, HIV/AIDS, domestic violence, sexual exploitation
and abuse, and forced pregnancies.
This constant impoverishment
can only be overcome with the political will and commitment of the
world’s governments. It can only be overcome by changing the
orientation of public investments, giving priority to social
investments, avoiding corruption, and working together with civil
society organizations, among them the women’s organizations, who work
at the country and regional level for the eradication of poverty and
implementation of fair and just social policies.
All this
requires putting the economy at the service of people, as people are
the main capital a country has. It also requires the implementation of
concrete measures in support of women’s equality and to put an end to
the reproduction of poverty.
We therefore demand:
- Gender equality to end poverty.
- Without the inclusion of gender equality, no development policies can be accepted.
- Focusing on women’s empowerment and gender justice highlights issues fundamental to tackle global poverty and inequality.
- Feminization of poverty is a reality. Address it!
Source: FTF





