Gender inequality in Mexico

Gender inequality in Mexico refers to disparate freedoms in health, education, and economic and political abilities between men and women in Mexico.[2][1] It has been diminishing throughout history, but continues to persist in many forms including the disparity in women's political representation and participation, the gender pay gap, and high rates of domestic violence and femicide. As of 2016, the World Economic Forum ranks Mexico 66th in terms of gender equality out of 144 countries.[3] Structural gender inequality is relatively homogeneous between the Mexican states as there are very few regional differences in the inequalities present.[4]

The Gender gap index for Mexico compared to other countries. Gender gap index is one of many multi-dimensional measures of gender inequality. Mexico was scored at 0.69 by World Economic Forum, and ranked 68 out of 136 countries in 2013.[1]

Gender statistics

The following table compares the population wide data for two genders on various inequality statistical measures, according to the most recent data available from The World Bank's Gender Statistics database.[5] Unemployment statistics are calculated based on the International Labour Organization (or ILO)'s method of calculation.

Gender Statistic Measure[5] Females (Mexico) Males (Mexico) Females (World) Males (World)
Infant mortality rate, (per 1,000 live births) in 2015 10.2 12.4 29.5 33.8
Life expectancy at birth, (years) in 2015 79.4 74.5 74.1 69.8
Life expectancy at age 60, (years) in 2012 23.7 21.6 [6]
Expected years of schooling in 2014 13.5 13.1 12.2 12.2
Primary school completion rate, (%) in 2014 105.1 104.3 90.6 91.5
Primary school education, gender of teachers (% ) in 2014 67.6 32.4 63.6 36.4
Lower secondary school completion rate, (%) in 2014 82.1 79.1 76.6 76.0
Secondary school education, pupils (%) in 2014 50.8 49.2 48.0 52.0
Account at a formal financial institution, (% of each gender, age 15+) in 2014 38.8 38.5 57.4 64.1
Unemployment, (% of that gender's labour force, ILO method) in 2017 4.3 3.9 6.2 5.5
Unemployment, youth (% of labour force ages 15–24, ILO method) in 2017 9.5 7.1 15.4 13.0
Ratio of female to male youth unemployment rate (% ages 15–24, ILO method) in 2017 134.1 100 115.4 100
Employment in agriculture, (% of employment of that gender) in 2016 3.7 18.8 [6]
Employment in industry, (% of employment of that gender) in 2016 16.9 30.5 [6]
Employment in services, (% of employment of that gender) in 2016 79.0 50.2 [6]
Self-employed, (% of employment of that gender) in 2016 25.3 27.6 [6]
Cause of death, by non-communicable diseases, ages 15–34, (%) in 2015 53.1 27.8 33.8 29.7
Cause of death, by non-communicable diseases, ages 35–59, (%) in 2015 87.1 69.8 71.9 65.9
Children in employment, (% of children ages 7–14) in 2013 3.8 7.4 [6]
Expected years of schooling in 2014 13.5 13.1 12.2 12.2
Fertility rate, total (births per woman) in 2015 2.2 2.5
Literacy rate, adults (% of that gender ages 15 and above) in 2015 93.5 95.5 82.3 89.7
Literacy rate, youth (% of that gender ages 15–24) in 2015 99.0 98.9 89.6 92.7
Maternal mortality ratio (per 100,000 live births) in 2015 38.0 216.0

Sex ratio (m per 100 f) in 2018

99.2

Seats held by women in National Parliaments (%) in 2018

42.6%


Global rankings

Various groups have ranked gender inequalities around the world. For example, the World Economic Forum publishes a Global Gender Gap Index score for each nation every year. The index focuses not on empowerment of women, but on the relative gap between men and women in four fundamental categories – economic participation, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment.[7] It includes measures such as estimated sex selective abortion, number of years the nation had a female head of state, female to male literacy rate, estimated income ratio of female to male in the nation, and several other relative gender statistic measures. It does not include factors such as crime rates against women versus men, domestic violence, honor killings or such factors. Where data is unavailable or difficult to collect, World Economic Forum uses old data or makes a best estimate to calculate the nation's Global Gap Index (GGI).[7]

According to the World Economic Forum's Gender Gap Index (GGI) for 2016, Mexico was ranked 66th out of 144 countries for gender equality. It was ranked 122nd in economic participation and opportunity, 51st in educational attainment, 34th in political empowerment, and 1st in health and survival.[3]

The purpose of the Human Development Report is to change the focus of development economics and encourage countries to focus more on the individual development of all its people and less on national income and gross domestic product.[8] The Human Development Report determines which capabilities are most important in its ranking system by considering whether they are universally valued by large groups of people and whether they are basic, and would therefore hinder the realization of other capabilities.[9] The index tries to put forth a more gender-sensitive public policy agenda by including gender equality and specific types of discrimination that affect the lives of women in developing countries as main focuses.[9]

The United Nation's Gender Inequality Index (part of the Human Development Report) for 2016 had Mexico ranked 77th out of 188 countries for gender equality.[10] Mexico's ranking on this index had gone down from its 2013 rank of 66th. This rank had gone up from its rank in 2012, which was 72nd.[11] This is an improvement from its ranking in 2010, when it ranked 68th out of 169 countries.[12]

Economic inequalities

Labor participation

As of 1995, women made up only 29% of Mexico's economically active population and 23% of the wage earning economically active population.[13] Since the 1990s, the number of women in the Mexican workforce has greatly increased while men's participation in the workforce has decreased.[14] The actual percentages of employed versus unemployed women averages about 30-35%, while the percentage of employed men averages around 70%.[14]

In addition, according to a study conducted by Margarita Valdés, 6% of those women in the workforce are either employed in the informal sector where they do not have a fixed salary or in the home-based industries sector where they receive no salary.[13] More women are employed performing unpaid yet socially important and vital jobs than are men.[15]

A Maya woman, souvenir maker.

Many women work in maquiladoras, or export-based manufacturing operations. The maquiladora labor force is largely made up of women, even though women went from making up 80% of the labor force in the 1980s to only 58.8% by 2006. However, this does vary by region.[16][17] Due to the declination of wages in the export manufacturing sector over time, maquila industry salaries do not cover the basic basket needs of their workers.[18][19]

Because these salaries are insufficient, workers often find it necessary to supplement them with informal work.[20] Maquiladoras also frequently use pregnancy tests in order to ensure they do not hire pregnant women. This fear tactic is also often used to frighten hired workers to not get pregnant in order to retain their employment.[17] In addition, according to a 2004 study by Alex Covarrubias and Gabriela Grijalva that took place in Sonora (northern Mexico), twenty percent of maquiladora workers had been victims of sexual harassment by male co-workers, supervisors, and managers.[21]

Another study found that in professional and technical occupations, there are about 65 women to every 100 men.[4] This study also found that the greatest economic gender inequality exists in business ownership, with 17 businesses owned by women to every 100 businesses owned by men.[4]

Even though the rural laborer gender ratio is about equal, employment rates for women in the Mexican rural labor market are much lower than those of men.[14] Studies also suggests that many women in rural communities feel that formal paid labor outside the home directly conflicts with the traditional role of women as homemakers.[22]

Occupational segregation by gender

Occupational gender segregation takes the form of both horizontal segregation- the unequal gender distribution across occupations- and vertical segregation- the overrepresentation of men in higher positions in both traditionally male and traditionally female fields.[23]

While occupational segregation exists in Mexico, segregation decreased between 1987 and 1993 from an occupational segregation index score of 26.6 to 23.5.[24] This means that 23.5% of women or 76.5% of men would have to move to different career field in order for all occupations to have equal gender composition.

Pay gap

While the disparity between male and female wages decreased from the 1980s to the early 1990s, the gap began to increase again in 1996 following the Mexican economic crisis. According to the International Trade Union Confederation, the overall wage gap in Mexico as of 2008 is 17.4%.[25] The gap varies by occupation; female teachers in Mexico make 91.2% of the salary of male teachers, while female industrial supervisors make only 66.9% of the wages earned by their male counterparts.[15]

Education inequalities

As of 2012, the World Economic Forum ranks Mexico 69th out of 135 countries in terms of gender equality in education attainment.[3] Mexico also ranks 75th in equality in literacy rates, tied for first (at parity) in equality in primary and secondary education enrollment, and 98th in equality in tertiary education enrollment.[3] This disparity is more prevalent for girls in low-income families, as these children are more likely to participate in domestic activities in the home rather than attend school.[26]

A study conducted by Sonia Frias found that in many Mexican states, the number of average years of education is at parity for men and women and literacy rates are nearly equal (100 literate men to 98 literate women); the gap, however, increases in college and graduate education, with 78 and 54 women to 100 men respectively.[4] This study also found that there were only 31 women to every 100 men in STEM fields of education.[4] In addition, as of 1995, 15% of the female population of Mexico is illiterate.[13]

Mexico is one of the few countries where the government has taken sexual stereotypes out of textbooks.[27]

A study of young children in Mexico came to the conclusion that because the young girls tend to be doing work in the home that is not considered a part of the formal labor force, they are not protected by government policies designed to protect their education. Policies and projects like these are usually conducted and focus on youth with formal employers, so many young girls are unable to attend school or even be contacted by the government to ensure that they are receiving an education because they are completing housework in their homes.[28][29][30]

Mexico is also one of only three OECD countries, the others being Switzerland and Turkey, where more men than women have obtained a tertiary education.[31]

Health inequalities

Abortion

Since 2008, 16 of the 32 states have made abortion illegal. However, the Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of laws permitting abortion until the 12th week of pregnancy. The only case where the federal government mandates access to abortion and emergency contraception is in the case of rape. However, many women face barriers to receiving this care including: inaccurate information, undue delays, and intimidation by officials.[32]

Studies also show that many Mexicans do not know accurate information about the legality of abortion in their country; often, they believe that abortion is not legal under any circumstance and thus do not know how to receive a safe abortion should they need one. The lack of access to safe and legal abortions leads to complications from unsafe abortions, which is estimated by the World Health Organization to be either the third or fourth highest cause of maternal mortality.[33][34][35]

Gender-based violence

Mexico has the 16th highest rate of homicides committed against women, also known as femicide, in the world. This rate has been on the rise since 2007.[36] In addition, the state of Mexico has one of the highest rates of domestic violence at 53%.[36] Femicide and gender violence is also more prevalent in regions along the Mexico-US border and in areas of high drug trading activity and drug violence.[37]

According to the 2013 Human Rights Watch, many women do not seek out legal redress after being victims of domestic violence and sexual assault because "the severity of punishments for some sexual offenses contingent on the "chastity" of the victim" and "those who do report them are generally met with suspicion, apathy, and disrespect."[32]

According to a 1997 study by Kaja Finkler, domestic abuse "is embedded in gender and marital relations fostered in Mexican women's dependence on their spouses for subsistence and for self-esteem, sustained by ideologies of romantic love, by family structure and residential arrangements."[38] A study released in March, 2018, found that 40.6% of employed women in Mexico City had reported some form of work-related disruption due to domestic violence.[39]

The exploitation through sex trafficking and forced prostitution increases the risk that a woman in Mexico will experience gender-based violence. It is thought that about 400 women enter into prostitution in Mexico City every day, and that eighty percent of those women are entering into prostitution against their will.[40] A study by Arun Kumar Acharya suggests that because of sex trafficking victims' inability to protect themselves from forced, unprotected sex at the threat of violence by madams, pimps, and others in power positions over them, sex trafficking victims are the most vulnerable to gender-based violence.[41]

STDs

In poorer regions of Mexico with large indigenous communities also experience high levels of STDs and health problems; for example, at least 778 women in the state of Oaxaca, one-third of the population of which is indigenous, died during pregnancy, childbirth or postpartum between 1995 and 2004.[42]

Sexual health and STDs are also big issues faced by those who have been forcibly entered into prostitution and sex trafficking. This is usually because sex trafficking and forced prostitution victims are unable to consistently negotiate condom use with their male partners at the threat of violence, which leads to an increase in HIV/AIDS and other STD exposure. This has also contributed to the stigmatization of these women as carriers of HIV/AIDS and STDs.[41]

Political inequalities

Political participation

In virtually every level of the Mexican government, women are underrepresented in comparison to the general population.[4] Mexico has had very few female cabinet members throughout its history, and has never had a female head of state.[15] According to a 1998 study, women held only 14.2 percent of parliamentary seats in Mexico, putting it behind most developed countries (with the exception of the United States) in female representation.[43]

A 2004 study suggests that girls in Mexico think political participation is as important as boys do, but because of their socialized belief that politics is a masculine career field, these children do not intend to seek a career in politics.[44]

Social life

Researcher Margarita Valdés noted that while there are few inequalities enforced by law or policy in Mexico, there are gender inequalities perpetuated by social structures and expectations that limit the capabilities of Mexican women; these inequalities are largely maintained by local patriarchal social structures that deny women the possibility of functioning in many different areas.[13]

Government policies

Mexico's Supreme Court declared marital rape illegal in November 2005.[45] The Mexican government adopted the General Act on Equality between Women and Men which was intended to establish a connect between the federal and the state level in the creation of policies and legal provisions in relation to gender equality in 2006.[46]

The government social welfare program Oportunidades provides more assistance to families with daughters in order to create more incentives for their families to send them to school.[31] Mexico has also earmarked funds, as of 2010, in order to "incorporate the gender dimension in educational programmes and initiatives."[31]

However, according to Rupert Knox, researcher on Mexico at Amnesty International, "In the past years, Mexico has approved a number of laws and institutions designed to protect women from discrimination and violence. Much of the problem, however, lies in the lack of effective implementation of these laws and the weakness of the institutions."[47]

See also

References

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  2. Robeyns, Ingrid (January 2011). "Sen's Capability Approach and Gender Inequality: Selecting Relevant Capabilities". Feminist Economics. 9 (2–3): 61–92. doi:10.1080/1354570022000078024.
  3. Till Alexander Leopold, Vesselina Ratcheva, Saadia Zahidi, Editors (2016). "The Global Gender Gap Report 2016" (PDF). World Economic Forum, Geneva, Switzerland. Retrieved 2017-10-12.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Frias, Sonia M. (2008). "Measuring Structural Gender Equality in Mexico: A State Level Analysis". Social Indicators Research. 88 (2): 215–246. doi:10.1007/s11205-007-9193-4.
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  6. Global average data not available
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  8. Haq, Mahbub ul. 1995. Reflections on Human Development. New York: Oxford University Press.
  9. Fukuda-Parr, Sakiko (2003-01-01). "The Human Development Paradigm: Operationalizing Sen's Ideas on Capabilities". Feminist Economics. 9 (2–3): 301–317. doi:10.1080/1354570022000077980. ISSN 1354-5701.
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  14. Pagan, Jose A.; Sanchez, Susana M. (April 2000). "Gender Differences in Labor Market Decisions: Evidence from Rural Mexico". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 48 (3): 619–637. doi:10.1086/452612.
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