July 12, 2025
India’s Low Global Gender Gap Ranking
Why in News ? India stands at a global crossroads — it is recognized as a rising economic power, a digital innovator, and home to the world’s largest youth population. Yet, gender inequality remains a deep-rooted challenge. The Global Gender Gap Report 2025 by the World Economic Forum places India at a dismal 131st out of 148 countries, particularly underperforming in economic participation and health and survival.
Relevance : UPSC Pre & Mains
Prelims : Global Gender Gap Report 2025
Mains : GS 1 & 2
Key Issues Highlighted in the Article
Low Global Gender Gap Ranking:
- India ranks 131/148 globally.
- Especially poor in economic participation and health and survival.
Health and Nutrition Neglect:
- Women’s healthy life expectancy is now lower than men’s.
- 57% of women (15–49 years) are anaemic (NFHS-5).
- Lack of reproductive and preventive healthcare.
- Widespread son preference continues to skew sex ratio at birth.
Economic Participation Deficit:
- India ranks 143rd in Economic Participation and Opportunity.
- Women earn less than a third of what men do.
- Female labour force participation remains critically low.
- Underrepresentation in decision-making spaces and formal economy.
Invisible and Unpaid Care Work:
- Women perform 7 times more unpaid domestic work than men (Time Use Survey).
- This labour remains unrecognized in national accounting and underfunded in policy.
Missed Economic Opportunity:
- McKinsey had projected a $770 billion GDP boost by closing gender gaps by 2025 — this target is now missed.
- Current trends indicate it may take over a century to close the gender gap globally; India lags even further behind.
Demographic Pressures:
- Elderly population to double by 2050, mostly comprising old women.
- Falling fertility rates will shrink the working-age population, increasing dependency burden.
- Without women’s active participation, fiscal and social stability is at risk.
Way Forward:
Invest in Women’s Health:
- Expand primary healthcare and reproductive health services.
- Tackle anaemia and malnutrition through targeted nutritional programs.
- Prioritize preventive care for rural and low-income women.
Recognize and Reduce Unpaid Care Work:
- Use Time Use Surveys to quantify women’s unpaid work.
- Invest in care infrastructure: crèches, elder care, maternity support.
- Provide direct financial support and public funding for caregiving responsibilities.
Promote Economic Inclusion:
- Implement gender budgeting effectively at the central and state levels.
- Ensure equal pay, provide safe workspaces, and enable re-entry policies for women.
- Increase representation of women in formal sectors and policy-making bodies.
Demographic Readiness:
- Plan for ageing population care, especially for vulnerable elderly women.
- Create a national care economy policy integrated with labour and health sectors.
- Use global best practices (e.g. Uruguay, South Korea) to develop inclusive models.
Treat Gender Equality as Economic Imperative:
- Move beyond slogans and tokenism.
- See women as agents of economic growth, not just beneficiaries.
- Integrate gender equality into macroeconomic planning and national development strategy.
Conclusion:
India’s demographic dividend and economic ambitions will remain incomplete if half its population continues to be excluded or under-supported. The Global Gender Gap Report 2025 is a wake-up call — not just for equality, but for economic logic. True development cannot take place without healthy, empowered, and economically active women. The time for policy intent is over; the time for policy action and investment is now.