Breaking Barriers
The promotion of economic opportunities for women is one of the most promising avenues for Malaysia's future development. Closing gaps between men's and women's economic opportunities could boost Malaysia's income per capita by 26.2 percent. Against this backdrop, the report relies on a comprehensive mixed-methods approach to investigate constraints on improving women's economic opportunities. It finds that Malaysia's female labor force participation rate has risen significantly in recent years but is still low compared to other countries in ASEAN. In addition, there are wide gender gap in access to jobs that pay well and offer benefits, social protection, and career prospects. Policy directions for improving the economic opportunities for women in Malaysia should include: (1) expand the availability, quality and affordability of child and elder care to enable more women to stay in the labor market and to work in more productive jobs; (2) strengthen the protection of informal workers and the productivity of workers and business owners to harness women's full economic potential; (3) pursue planned reforms of the legal environment and strengthen the implementation, monitoring and enforcement of laws and regulations, (4) improve support for parents, in line with international legal norms and (5) address gender norms and attitudes in education and among the wider population.
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Format: | Report biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2019-09
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Subjects: | EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, ENROLLMENT, EDUCATION, GENDER GAP, FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, LABOR MARKET, EMPLOYMENT, WAGE GAP, WOMEN IN BUSINESS, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/734461569247873555/Breaking-Barriers-Toward-Better-Economic-Opportunities-for-Women-in-Malaysia https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32476 |
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Summary: | The promotion of economic opportunities
for women is one of the most promising avenues for
Malaysia's future development. Closing gaps between
men's and women's economic opportunities could
boost Malaysia's income per capita by 26.2 percent.
Against this backdrop, the report relies on a comprehensive
mixed-methods approach to investigate constraints on
improving women's economic opportunities. It finds that
Malaysia's female labor force participation rate has
risen significantly in recent years but is still low
compared to other countries in ASEAN. In addition, there are
wide gender gap in access to jobs that pay well and offer
benefits, social protection, and career prospects. Policy
directions for improving the economic opportunities for
women in Malaysia should include: (1) expand the
availability, quality and affordability of child and elder
care to enable more women to stay in the labor market and to
work in more productive jobs; (2) strengthen the protection
of informal workers and the productivity of workers and
business owners to harness women's full economic
potential; (3) pursue planned reforms of the legal
environment and strengthen the implementation, monitoring
and enforcement of laws and regulations, (4) improve support
for parents, in line with international legal norms and (5)
address gender norms and attitudes in education and among
the wider population. |
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