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Related: About this forum'care work done by poor women is worth 10.8 trillion US dollars: 3X bigger than whole tech industry'
Cross-posting by request of niyad:Oxfam's 'Time to Care' report shows global wealth founded on inequality - Jan. 19, 2020
''underpaid and unpaid work by women and girls adds three times more to the global economy each year than the whole technology industry together.''
Lawson says Oxfams annual report examines the relationship between billionaires and the super, super rich people at the top of the global economy, and the people at the bottom, particularly the hundreds of millions of poor women who spend billions of hours a day, in caring for the sick, caring for the elderly, cooking, cleaning
Unseen and unrewarded contribution by women
Its a pun on the word care, he says, because its this foundation of unpaid work done by the poorest women that generates enormous wealth for the economy.
Lawson notes that in the report it is calculated that the combined contribution to the global economy of all this care work done by poor women is worth 10.8 trillion US dollars: thats three times bigger than the whole tech industry - three times bigger than Google, Facebook, all of them put together.
It is this unseen and unrewarded contribution by women that creates enormous wealth that is sucked upward into the bank accounts of the richest people and of the billionaires, he says.
That wealth generated by the worlds poorest women, he explains, is encapsulated and concentrated in the hands of a tiny number of people who are predominantly men.
'Billionaire boom'
Lawson expresses his belief that the world would be much better off without the current billionaire boom phenomenon.
Gender equality and economic equality go hand in hand
Lawson concludes noting that the current economy, that gives an extreme amount of wealth to a tiny group of people at the top is also a deeply sexist economy: Its an economy that is built on the backs of women and of poor women and their labour, whether its poorly paid labour or even unpaid labour, it is a sexist economy and its a broken economy, and you can only fix the gap between the rich and the poor if at the same time you fix the gap between women and men.
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2020-01/oxfam-annual-report-unpaid-work-poor-women.html
https://www.oxfamamerica.org/explore/issues/extreme-inequality-and-poverty/
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'care work done by poor women is worth 10.8 trillion US dollars: 3X bigger than whole tech industry' (Original Post)
Donkees
Mar 2021
OP
niyad
(119,939 posts)1. Thank you for posting this extremely important, sadly depressing, information. Women's
unpaid/underpaid work and its value to world economies has been studied for decades, yet nothing improves.