Gender Gap Index: Bangladesh ranks 71st outmastering South Asian neighbours

The Report Desk

Published: July 14, 2022, 11:53 AM

Gender Gap Index: Bangladesh ranks 71st outmastering South Asian neighbours

Bangladesh has ranked 71st among 146 countries in the Global Gender Gap Index, outmastering all other South Asian neighbours.

 

According to a study by the World Economic Forum, the gender gap in Bangladesh is the lowest among countries in South Asia with a score of 0.714.

 

Bangladesh ranked ninth overall in terms of political participation. However, the country scored poorly in economic participation – ranking 141, better than only Egypt, India, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

 

It came in at 123rd on educational attainment and 129th on health and survival.

 

Women in Bangladesh saw a decline in overall gender parity in 2022 from 2021 according to the lower gender gap score and index ranking. 

 

That was in part due to poorer performance on educational attainment as the gender gap in literacy widened, the reort added.

 

Bangladesh saw little change in terms of political empowerment and health and survival.

However, there was a reduction in workforce participation for both men and women, but the proportional impact was higher for women. 

 

However, the difference was counteracted slightly by an increase in the share of women engaged in professional and technical work as well as an increase in estimated earned income.

 

Bangladesh topped the regional ranking, followed by Nepal, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Bhutan, India, Iran, Pakistan, and Afghanistan.

 

Bangladesh and Nepal had closed 69% of their gender gaps, the WEF said, while Afghanistan had only closed 43.5%, the lowest in the world.

 

South Asia ranked the worst among the eight regions in the report in terms of closing the gender gap. The study noted that there was a lack of progress on gender parity in most countries since the last edition of the report.

 

As a whole, the region scored the lowest in the world on the economic participation index, and lagged in terms of health and survival and educational attainment.

 

The best indicator for the region is political empowerment, which has usually been strong due to the high share of women in political leadership. 

 

Bangladesh, India and Nepal, where women have held the highest office in the country or participate more widely in government, scored the highest in the region on this front.

 

Globally, Iceland topped the list on gender equality, with a score of 0.908, while Afghanistan, where the Taliban have taken power once again, came in at the bottom with 0.435.

Link copied!