Bangladesh has managed to stay ahead of its regional neighbours since 2014
Bangladesh has held its topmost position among the countries of South Asia in ensuring gender equality, for the seventh time in a row, according to a latest report by the World Economic Forum (WEF).
Despite being the best performer in the region, Bangladesh has slipped 15 notches to rank 65th among 156 countries on the WEF Global Gender Gap Report 2021, which benchmarks countries based on how close they are to reaching gender equality.
According to the 15th edition of the report published on March 31, Bangladesh’s overall gender gap has widened by 0.7% which caused it global position to deteriorate.
However, Bangladesh is the only South Asian nation in the top 100 countries globally, having closed 71.9% of its overall gender gap so far.
Bangladesh has managed to stay ahead of all South Asian nations since 2014.
In the latest report, Nepal has been ranked second best in the region, as the country narrowed the overall gender gap by 68.3% and hold the 106th position globally.
Sri Lanka has ranked third in the region after closing the gender gap by 67% and placed at the 116th position on the index, followed by the Maldives at 128th position and Bhutan at 130th position.
India was placed at the 140th position, third from the bottom in the region while Pakistan stands 153rd globally, being the second-worst performer in the region.
Afghanistan was named as the least gender-equal country in the world, with gender gap closed by 44.4%.
Region-wise, South Asia is the second-lowest performer after the Middle East and North Africa combined, bridging 62.3% of its gender gap. It is now expected to take 195.4 years to close the gender gap.
Iceland is the most gender-equal country in the world for the 12th time, being closest to achieving gender equality. It has narrowed the gender gap by 89.2%, followed by Finland 86.1%, Norway 84.9%, New Zealand 84%, and Sweden 82.3%.
Four key dimensions
The WEF prepares the index measuring gender-based gaps on four key dimensions -- economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment.
The scores placed Bangladesh at 147th in economic participation and opportunity, 121st in educational attainment, 134th in health and survival, and 7th in political empowerment.
Bangladesh's declining performance is almost entirely due to a reversal in closing the "economic participation and opportunity" gender gap, which measures labor force participation, wage equity for comparable jobs, estimated earned income, and the proportion of women among politicians, senior officials, and managers, as well as among professionals and technical staff.
The country has made more gains in terms of "political empowerment" than in terms of gender equity, with 54.6% of the gender gap closed so far.
"Bangladesh is the country where a woman has been in a head-of-state role the longest (27 years) over the past 50 years. Yet, more must be done to involve women at all levels of political life," WEF said in the report.
In terms of educational attainment that depends on literacy rate and enrolment in primary, secondary and tertiary education, Bangladesh has made a remarkable progress bridging 95.1% of the gender gap.
As many as 37 countries have already attained gender parity in this regard.
While gender differences in health and survival, as measured by the sex ratio at birth and life expectancy, are limited, the report claims that a larger change is needed to improve women's security and health.
As the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic continues to be felt, the global gender gap seems to have been extended by a generation from 99.5 years to 135.6 years.
0 Comments