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[27th August 2025] The gender angle to India’s economic vulnerabilities

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[UPSC 2021] Examine the role of ‘Gig Economy’ in the process of empowerment of women in India.

Linkage: The article highlights that India’s economic vulnerabilities are aggravated by its failure to integrate women into the workforce. While traditional women-dominated export sectors face instability due to tariff shocks, the gig economy offers a new pathway for empowerment. Platforms like Urban Company demonstrate how women can earn sustainable incomes (₹18,000–25,000/month) with safety, insurance, and skill development. Thus, the gig economy is not just an employment option but a structural enabler of women’s empowerment, mobility, and autonomy. However, as the article stresses, formalisation of gig work, targeted policy support, and social protections are vital to make this empowerment sustainable.

Mentor’s Comment

India’s economic rise is undeniable, valued at $4.19 trillion, it is poised to be the world’s third-largest economy. Yet, the proposed 50% U.S. tariffs on Indian exports highlight an uncomfortable truth: India’s growth story is fragile because it has failed to empower half its population. This article unpacks how gender imbalance in labour markets is no longer a social concern but an economic vulnerability.

Introduction

India’s ascent as a global economic power is being tested by external shocks such as U.S. tariff hikes targeting $40 billion worth of Indian exports. Unlike China, which diversified and scaled its manufacturing, India’s labour-intensive sectors, textiles, gems, leather, footwear, remain exposed. These are precisely the industries that disproportionately employ women. The looming disruption reveals a deeper structural weakness: India’s persistently low female labour force participation rate (FLFPR). What was once viewed as a social development challenge is now a core economic liability threatening the sustainability of India’s demographic dividend.

The U.S. tariff shock and its economic implications

  1. Targeted exports: U.S. tariffs at 50% could shave off nearly 1% from India’s GDP, directly hitting sectors employing 50 million workers, many of them women.
  2. Comparative disadvantage: India could face a 30–35% cost disadvantage against competitors like Vietnam.
  3. Dependency: The U.S. absorbs 18% of India’s exports, exposing India’s lack of diversification.
  4. Employment vulnerability: An export decline of up to 50% could destabilise women-dominated industries.

Women’s participation as India’s strategic liability

  1. Persistently low FLFPR: Stuck at 37–41.7%, far below China’s 60% and the global average.
  2. Lost GDP potential: IMF estimates closing the gender gap could boost India’s GDP by 27%.
  3. Cultural and systemic barriers: Patriarchal norms, unpaid care work, safety issues, poor public transport, and sanitation gaps keep women away from education and jobs.
  4. Urban stagnation: Urban female labour participation shows little improvement despite rising education levels.

The ticking clock of India’s demographic dividend

  1. Demographic window: India’s working-age population outnumbers dependents, but this will close by 2045.
  2. Historical lessons: China, Japan, and the U.S. capitalised on their demographic peak to fuel growth; Southern Europe failed due to low female participation, resulting in stagnation.
  3. Risk of lost opportunity: Without women’s integration, India risks a slowdown before fully realising its demographic advantage.

Lessons from global experiences in women’s empowerment

  1. U.S. during WWII: Women’s labour mobilised with equal pay and childcare.
  2. China’s post-1978 reforms: FLFPR at 60%, backed by state-supported childcare and education.
  3. Japan’s reforms: FLFPR rose from 63% to 70%, boosting GDP per capita by 4%.
  4. Netherlands model: Flexible part-time work with full benefits, relevant for India’s context.
  5. Common thread: Institutional investments in legal protections, skills, and care infrastructure.

Emerging solutions and policy innovations within India

  1. Karnataka’s Shakti Scheme: Free bus travel boosted female ridership by 40%, improving access to jobs, education, and autonomy.
  2. Targeted fiscal policies: Tax incentives for female entrepreneurs, digital inclusion drives, and gender-skilling programmes.
  3. Gig economy empowerment: Urban Company employs 15,000+ women, offering ₹18,000–25,000/month along with maternity benefits and insurance.
  4. Public schemes: Rajasthan’s Indira Gandhi Urban Employment Guarantee Scheme generated 4 crore person-days of work, with 65% jobs for women, enabling many to work for the first time.

Conclusion

The U.S. tariff threat is a wake-up call, India’s economic fragility lies not just in external shocks but in internal neglect of women’s potential. Empowering women is no longer a matter of social justice but a strategic necessity for sustaining growth, harnessing the demographic dividend, and achieving global competitiveness. The choice is stark: invest in women and rise as a resilient power, or ignore them and remain vulnerable to shocks and stagnation.

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