Showing posts with label diversidad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diversidad. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

The Colombian Labour Market behind Female Participation in Management

By: Carolina Herrera-Cano (IB, MIB)*
Analyst at the Observatory in Trade, Investment and Development
Lecturer of Ethics and CSR at Universidad EAFIT


Women’s rights are increasingly becoming an important trend for governments and civil society and, with the purpose of monitoring their advances, different indicators are being used. Although gender gaps have narrowed in many ways –according to the United Nations Millennium Development Goals Report, goal 3 (to promote gender equality and empower women) made important progress in terms of education, employment, and political representation-, some gender disparities have deteriorated, sometimes even as a result of others’ improvement. Accordingly, indexes evaluating the status of women’s rights around the world may present contradictory scenarios (United Nations, 2015). Those figures do not only show the multiple challenges women’s rights still have in a global scale, but they are the evidence of a need to have a closer look to gender equality indicators even in countries were figures seem to indicate positive scenario for women’s rights (WEF, 2015).

The Global Gender Gap Report (GGGR) quantifies gender-based disparities in four categories: Economic Participation and Opportunity, Educational Attainment, Health and Survival, and Political Empowerment. According to this assessment, countries with the highest equality between men and women are Iceland and Norway. Yet, it is useful to analyse them in a deeper way four categories in these countries. Iceland ranks 1 in three of the four categories but has a surprising 105 position in health and survival index. This is also the case of Norway with a 70 position for health and 32 for educational attainment. However, Norway’s performance in economic participation (2) and political empowerment (3) makes it the second most equal country in terms of gender.

According to the GGGR, Colombia has faced important improvements in terms of gender equality. The country has moved up 11 positions (from 53 to 42) in the ranking, far from Mexico (71), Chile (73) and Brazil (85), and has effectively closed 74% of its gender gap. More surprisingly, in the words of the Inter American Development Bank (IADB) (2016), this country, along with Jamaica and St. Lucia, has an outstanding position in the continent due to its larger share of women in managerial positions. This situation has also been documented by the United Nations Development Programme, which highlights that only in five out of 35 developing countries included in their data; women constitute 30% or more in decision-making positions (UN Women, 2015): this result also includes Colombia, and Botswana, Costa Rica Croatia, and South Africa.

Nevertheless, women participation in managerial positions hides important challenges for the Colombian labour market. Actually, the IADB recognizes the remaining glass-ceilings women still have to fight with even in Jamaica, St. Lucia, and Colombia: even in these countries female representation is still low at the highest spheres of the companies. More importantly, for the case of Colombia, some authors attribute the increased number of women in management to unequal remuneration between men and women: as female labour is usually less remunerated, employers prefer to hire women in order to reduce costs. In fact, it has been found that women participation in management has only been reached in lower to middle positions, as higher levels are still occupied by men. Only 4% of the Colombian 100 largest companies have women in the top management (BBC Mundo, 2015).

This situation is consistent with Darity’s (1989) and Darity and Williams’ (1985) heterodox perspective predicting the effects of trade gender pay gaps: international competition and competition between companies use existing gender inequalities to reduce unit costs. In consequence, this phenomenon increases women participation in management at the expense of the perpetuation of wage gaps between men and women. This issue has also been addressed by the International Labour Organization (ILO). In its most recent report “Women in Business and Management”, the ILO highlights how despite women nowadays represent 40% of jobs worldwide; their wages are still lower than men’. In fact, according to the Global Wage Report, wage gaps remain significant around the world. Even though gender wage gaps have narrowed slightly in the last decade thanks to a declining in most of the countries with available data, Colombia, together with Australia, Finland, Mongolia, and Paraguay are the only countries where the gap expanded (UN Women, 2015).

Another important challenge for gender equality in Colombia which is also related to the labour market is women’s higher levels of poverty. This situation can be explained by two important reasons. The first is informal employment: in the country, more than 60% of the employed women work in the informal sector: this restricts women access to pension funds and safety conditions. The second is female unemployment. Unemployment rate in women over the past two decades has continuously been 5% higher than men unemployment (Sabogal 2009). In 2013, Colombian women presented an unemployment rate of 13,8% while this figure was 8,1% for men. Additionally, women engagement to labour markets has not been successful: while men’s labour force participation rate is 79,7%, women’s is only 55,8 percent. Furthermore, recent studies show a faster declining tendency in women employment in a variety of developing countries, including Brazil, Colombia Cost Rica, Philippines, and Republic of Korea (UN Women, 2015).

Although Colombian improvements in GGGR during last year can be explained by wage equality efforts (WEF, 2016), as it was possible to show, changes in country’s labour market will be fundamental in gender equality pursuit. The Colombian case is a great example of the importance to have a closer look to gender equality indicators. In spite of the need to engage women in decision-making processes of private and public organizations in 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (United Nations), when women participation in managerial positions coincides with (or can even be explained by) wage gaps, informal employment, and unemployment, it does no longer constitute a positive scenario for women’s rights. The existing presence of women in management market together with appropriate business, civil society and governmental efforts to promote equality in the labour market makes Colombia a country with a great potential to promote trade and economic development with a gender perspective.

Monday, February 3, 2014

La promesa del biocomercio en Colombia

Por: David Ricardo Murcia Sánchez (*) dmurcias@gmail.com
Estudiante de Ciencias Políticas de la Universidad EAFIT, Colombia

Al pensar en Colombia como uno de los países más ricos en biodiversidad del mundo, no puede asegurarse que su rol en esta área del comercio deba darse de suyo. De hecho, este tipo de ventaja natural que, tanto como el país andino, como muchos otros países en vías de desarrollo poseen, puede llegar de peligrar debido a malos manejos de esta riqueza o incluso a la sobreexplotación (INBio, 2013). En este marco, la UNCTAD en conjunto con varias organizaciones (gubernamentales, internacionales y, también, ONG) ha lanzado varios programas de ayuda para la capacitación hacia el aprovechamiento de este tipo de recursos (INBio, 2013; ITC and UNCTAD, 2002).

De igual manera, la Conferencia de Naciones Unidas sobre el Comercio y el Desarrollo (UNCTAD) ha publicado los Lineamientos para la Administración Sostenible de Productos de Biocomercio [1] (UNCTAD, 2013). Allí plantea principios claros para el aprovechamiento y la explotación de manera perdurable de los recursos nativos; es por esto que recomienda realizar un estudio completo de la complejidad del medio ambiente del producto que se pretende comerciar, para tener conocimiento de los impactos que la actividad tendría y la consecuente capacidad de resiliencia del terreno mismo.

Dentro de dichas directrices no se comprende la naturaleza de manera aislada, sino que se pretende ofrecer una visión completa de todos los actores que componen el medio ambiente a intervenir: incluyendo a las comunidades humanas tradicionales que conviven de manera directa con el productos en cuestión, lo cual amplía la capacidad de éxito; pues éstas no sólo se incluyen como factores pasivos: sujetos a ser organizados dentro del esquema de explotación del recurso, sino en un papel activo para la planeación y desempeño del modelo de comercio, aportando su conocimiento tradicional (UNCTAD, 2013).

Sin embargo, el marco propuesto por UNCTAD (2013), tiene que tener una materialización ajustada al caso de cada nación y como en el estudio del documento CONPES 3697 del jurista Corredor (Corredor, 2012), los planes de aumentar el potencial competitivo de biocomercio tiene que ser contrastado con las limitaciones fiscales que el Estado colombiano tiene para financiarlo, no sólo en la parte pecuniaria sino también al alentar la innovación mediante la investigación, ya que este sector está en manos de empresas aún en consolidación. No obstante, la dificultades que presente, ésta permanece como una área de crecimiento económico para el país que no debe dejarse de lado por los costos iniciales que requiere para su potencialización.


Bibliografía



Biocomercio. (2013) Tomado de URL: http://www.inbio.ac.cr/es/inbio/inb_biocomercio.htm

Corredor, Guillermo Rodrigo (2012). Comentarios al Documento conpes 3697 'Política para el desarrollo comercial de la biotecnología a partir del uso sostenible de la biodiversidad': promoviendo la innovación a través del fortalecimiento de las capacidades de investigación o creando barreras adicionales. Revista Contexto, (37), 53-66

ITC, UNCTAD Launch BioTrade Facilitation Programme. (2002). International Trade Forum, (4), 26.


UNCTAD. (2013). Guidelines for the Sustainable Management of BioTrade Products: Resource Sssessment. Genève: United Nations.



[1] Traducido del inglés: Guidelines for the Sustainable Management of BioTrade Products: resource assessment. (UNCTAD, 2013)