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Culture and Covid delay women’s advance in macho Mexico

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When Tatiana Clouthier, Mexico’s new economy minister, was in her 20s and finishing her first civil service job, she found out that she was on the lowest salary of all her colleagues. “That was my first shock of understanding what it means to be a woman and to earn less,” she says, in a video interview with the FT.

A dozen years later, by then a member of Congress, she was warned by a male colleague about her career: “Your children are small and your husband is very handsome and young — you’ll put your marriage at risk.”

This was in the early 2000s, less than half a century after women gained the right to vote in 1952. Since then, Macho Mexico has made significant progress.

Women now hold nine of the 19 posts in Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s government. Indeed, in June 2019, gender parity in Mexico’s government, Congress, judiciary, autonomous institutions and election candidacies was enshrined in the constitution. So, too, was “language that makes women visible and included”.

But even though Clouthier — who managed López Obrador’s triumphant presidential election campaign in 2018 — has experienced sexist values first hand, a recent verbal slip showed how deeply entrenched gender attitudes remain in Latin America’s second-biggest economy.

In a virtual news conference soon after starting her job in January, she referred to her female under-secretary, Luz María de la Mora, by her first name, and the diminutive “LuzMa”. She addressed her male under-secretary, Ernesto Acevedo, by the honorific “Doctor”, even though both officials have PhDs.

For feminists in Mexico, comments such as this prove that social change is sometimes only superficial — and that, despite major strides, there is still a long way to go.

Clouthier states that studies show Mexican women want to have jobs and help with caring for their children. Yet, on all three counts, results are mixed — and Covid-19 has made things tougher still.

“Women are the most affected by Covid and super vulnerable in employment terms,” says Fatima Masse, director of inclusive society at IMCO, a leading think-tank.

She noted that 73% of the women who lost their jobs at the beginning of the pandemic have returned to work. but 57 per cent of job losses in January compared with December were among women and “nearly 800,000 women who had recovered their jobs in December 2020 lost them again in January 2021”.

Mexican women, like in many countries, are responsible for caring to elderly or sick relatives and children. López Obrador was criticised when he took office for scrapping subsidies to children’s nurseries and giving women cash transfers instead, which did not always covering nursery charges.

Clouthier says a law designed to ensure the right to “dignified care” was passed in the lower house of Congress last November, but critics say no new funds or institutions have been proposed to support this.

“They consider that cash transfers are like offering a welfare state — that’s inaccurate,” Masse says.


57%


Comparatively, January saw a greater share of job losses than December.

Violence is one of the thorniest issues holding back women’s participation in the workforce. Clouthier states that women who work outside the home are more likely to escape violence. She is offering $1,200 in micro-credits to women who run small businesses, which will provide 20,000.

But, in the first nine months of 2020, nearly one in 10 homes reported some kind of domestic violence in a country where two-thirds of women have suffered violence — 44 per cent at the hands of their partners. A staggering 11 women are killed each day. A recent study showed that 24 percent of crimes classified under femicide between 2012-2018 resulted in convictions. However more than twice the number of murders of women were not considered femicide. This suggests that there is almost total impunity.

López Obrador has ignited a storm of protest for refusing to criticise his party’s candidate for governor of the state of Guerrero in the June midterm elections, even though Félix Salgado Macedonio faces multiple allegations of rape — including by one woman who says he drugged her first.

Women were further dismayed when López Obrador admitted he had been clueless about what women meant by a social media campaign urging “break the pact” — a reference to patriarchy — and had needed to ask his wife.

“He’s the head of state. Words build realities,” says Arussi Unda, spokeswoman for Brujas del Mar, a feminist collective which rose to prominence last year when it organised “a day without women” strike.

Statistics in Mexico show that women work harder than men, make less and are less likely to reach the top of the corporate ladder.

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When IMCO — the Mexican Institute for Competitiveness — analysed 155 listed companies, it found that Mexico’s 9 per cent female board representation was the lowest among similar economies or European nations. Only two women were the chief executives.

IMCO has indicated that Mexico’s GDP would increase by 15 per cent by 2030 if 8.2m more women joined the workforce. The country currently has one of the world’s lowest rates of female participation in the workforce, a little above Bangladesh but below Romania and Kyrgyzstan.

Clouthier says she is working with the UK government on a pilot scheme to analyse Mexico’s gender pay gap. Graciela Márquez, her predecessor in the job, also a woman, launched schemes to help women export artisanal products, but Clouthier acknowledged progress so far is “baby steps”.

She also acknowledged the importance of coding, ecommerce, and tech skills for women looking to re-enter work. However, encouraging girls into science, maths, technology, engineering and technology subjects does not yet figure on the education ministry’s radar.

So when La-Lista, a new media venture, kicked off in January, chief executive Bárbara Anderson made sure the first story was about female role models — the 14 women who made Mexico’s access to Covid-19 vaccines possible.

“The credit went to the men but the success of getting the vaccines depended on these 14 women, some of whom had to be connecting to their computers at 2am, when their kids were in bed, to talk to officials in other countries,” she told the FT.

“Cultural change is very slow,” says Marta Lamas, a professor at Mexico’s UNAM university, who has fought for women’s rights for half a century. Or as Unda puts it, particularly regarding gender violence, “I don’t think we’re going backwards but we’re meeting a lot of resistance ahead”.



Source: Financial Times

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