Scant number of women in top positions hampers COVID-19 recovery: UN
A health care workers inoculate women with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, outside the Rommel Fernandez soccer stadium where the parking lot has been converted into a vaccination site in Panama City, Florida, U.S., June 28, 2021. (AP Photo)


The United Nations said Thursday that insufficient number of women representatives in virus-related task forces hampers global efforts to recover from deadly pandemic.

According to it, women are being excluded from critical decision-making roles, which threatens with a dragged crisis. Only 6% of coronavirus task forces, which are responsible for coordinating government responses to the deadly virus, have equal numbers of men and women, while 11% have no women at all, found the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP).

"The pivotal decisions being made today will affect the well-being of people and planet for generations to come," Achim Steiner, UNDP's administrator, said in a statement. "Sustainable recovery is only possible when women are able to play a full role in shaping a post-COVID-19 world that works for all of us."

New data by the UNDP and the Gender Inequality Research Lab at the University of Pittsburgh found that women hold less than one in three top leadership positions in public administration globally, jeopardizing a green and inclusive recovery.

While 58% of employees in health ministries are women, they only hold 34% of health policy decision-making positions, their research in 170 countries found. The analysis comes as many countries grapple with the economic and social fallout from COVID-19, which UNDP said could push another 105 million women and girls into poverty by 2030.

UNDP highlighted an "alarming rise in violence against women and girls" and the "large loss of jobs and income, which are threatening to set back progress on gender equality." It said that governments are more responsive and accountable and the quality of public services, particularly around health, childcare and violence against women, significantly improves when women take leadership roles in public administration.

"While the findings are disheartening, they are not surprising," Henriette Kolb, head of the gender and economic inclusion group at the World Bank Group's International Finance Corporation, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "Women in both the public and private sector are severely underrepresented in leadership positions. However, if we want to create a resilient, equitable, inclusive and growing economy, we need everybody to have a seat at the leadership table."