Originally published on data.unwomen.org

UN Women’s newest report reveals that women and girls have disproportionately suffered the socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 – be it through lost jobs and reduced work hours, increased intensity of care and domestic work, and strains on their physical and mental health. And yet, the report also shows that women and girls are far less likely than men and boys to receive COVID-19 relief or social protection, from governments or NGOs.

New data show women and girls far less likely to receive COVID-19 relief

Women and girls left behind: Glaring gaps in pandemic responses compiles and analyses the results of 45 Rapid Gender Assessment surveys (RGAs) on the socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 produced by UN Women in partnership with national statistics offices, governmental entities and international partners. The RGAs include nearly 100,000 respondents across all regions surveyed from April 2020–March 2021. 

See full report

In the economic sphere, the RGAs reveal uneven impacts by sex and age. Although job losses affected nearly a quarter of women and men, 29 per cent of working-aged mothers living with children lost their jobs compared to only 20 per cent of working-aged men living with children. Young women living with children were also hard-hit, with 56 per cent seeing reduced paid work hours versus only 44 per cent of young men living with children. 

When it comes to care and domestic work, partnered women with children in the household were most likely to report increased domestic work (67 per cent women versus 63 per cent men) and childcare (70 per cent women versus 65 per cent men), and were more likely to report that the intensity of their work had increased (defined as time spent on three or more activities). 

Women were also more likely to report strained physical and mental health, with younger women most affected – 71 per cent of women aged 18–24 experienced mental and/or emotional stress, compared to 59 per cent of young men. Widowed women living with children were also more likely than men in the same situation to report strained mental and emotional well-being (72 per cent versus 68 per cent). 

The RGA data also confirm that relief and social protection schemes have fallen short of their potential. Women were significantly less likely to report receiving pandemic-related cash relief from governments (10 per cent of women versus 16 per cent of men). Single women living with children were particularly left behind, being less than half as likely as single men living with children to receive cash relief (12 per cent of women versus 25 per cent of men). Women without children (whether single, widowed or partnered) were also less likely to receive cash relief (8 per cent women versus 17 per cent of men). 

When it comes to social protection, women were half as likely as men to report being covered by unemployment insurance (7 per cent of women versus 14 per cent of men) in 19 countries. In particular, single women with children were far less likely than their male counterparts to be covered by unemployment insurance (5 per cent of women versus 16 per cent of men) or to receive support from NGOs (8 per cent of women versus 25 per cent of men). Single women without children were also far less likely than single men without children to be covered by unemployment insurance (8 per cent of women versus 23 per cent of men).

Notably, younger women (aged 18–24) were also less likely to report receiving cash relief (9 per cent versus 21 per cent of men), unemployment insurance (5 per cent versus 18 per cent of men) or support from NGOs (6 per cent versus 7 per cent of men). 

These findings are particularly surprising given the data about how younger women, single moms and partnered women with children have been hardest hit by COVID-19. This suggests that many governments and NGOs have not been effectively targeting relief policies to reach those in the greatest need, despite compelling age- and sex-disaggregated data clearly illustrating impacts. 

Gender-responsive policies matter

At the same time, RGA data reveal that in countries that did design policies to address women’s economic security during the pandemic, women were 1.6 times as likely to report receiving government relief than in countries without such policies. This was calculated using data from the UNDP-UN Women Gender Response Tracker, and controlling for job loss and socioeconomic circumstances prior to the pandemic.

Across 28 countries, women living in countries that adopted policy measures that directly support unpaid care during the pandemic were less likely to report increases in unpaid care and domestic work (82 per cent in countries without such policies, compared to 78 per cent in countries with policies). 

Conversely, in countries without measures addressing women’s economic security or unpaid care, women were 1.3 times as likely to report negative impacts on their emotional and mental well-being as in countries that invoked such policies. 

Also, women who reported receiving relief were less likely to report increased mental and emotional strain by 11 percentage points over those who did not receive relief. 

The report concludes that relief and social protection responses effectively targeted to the needs of women and girls play a key role in mitigating the pandemic’s disproportionate adverse impacts on women. For policymaking to be more gender-responsive, decision-makers must both invest in and pay attention to gender data. And to build back better, governments and NGOs need evidence-driven policies and responses that leave no one behind.