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Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Decline in women work participation rates can be traced to poor quality of data collection processes

In our concern with ostensibly declining women’s work participation, we have missed out on identifying sectors from which women are excluded and more importantly, in which women are included. It may be time for us to count women’s work rather than women workers.

India is one of the few countries in the world where women’s work participation rates have fallen sharply — from 29 per cent in 2004-5 to 22 per cent in 2011-12 and to 17 per cent in 2017-18. Both the NDA and UPA governments have found themselves in a hot seat trying to defend economic policies that may have pushed women out of the workforce. Trying to explain whether women are choosing to focus on domestic responsibilities or whether they are pushed out of the workforce has become a minor industry among economists.
Strangely, the one explanation we have not looked at is whether the declining quality of economic statistics may account for this trend. Our pride in the statistical system built by PC Mahalanobis is so great that we find it unimaginable that it could fail to provide us with reliable employment data. However, as challenges to economic statistics have begun to emerge in such diverse areas as GDP data and consumption expenditure, perhaps it is time to consider the unimaginable. Is the decline in women’s labour force participation real or is it a function of the way in which employment data are collected?
The anatomy of the decline in women’s work participation rates shows that it is driven by rural women. In the prime working age group (25-59), urban women’s worker to population ratios (WPR) fell from 28 per cent to 25 per cent between 2004-5 and 2011-12, stagnating at 24 per cent in 2017-18. However, compared to these modest changes, rural women’s WPR declined sharply from 58 per cent to 48 per cent and to 32 per cent over the same period. Among rural women, the largest decline seems to have taken place in women categorised as unpaid family helpers — from 28 per cent in 2004-5 to 12 per cent in 2017-18. This alone accounts for more than half of the decline in women’s WPR. The remaining is largely due to a drop of about 9 percentage points in casual labour. In contrast, women counted as focusing solely on domestic duties increased from 21 per cent to 45 per cent.
How do we explain this massive change? Rather than assuming a sudden transformation that has turned Indian women into housewives or an economic catastrophe that has pushed women out of the labour force, let us consider the unthinkable — it is the change in our statistical systems that drives these results. The questionnaires through which the National Statistical Office (NSO) collects employment data have not changed, but the statistical workforce has, and the surveys that performed reasonably well in the hands of seasoned interviewers are too complex for poorly trained contract data collectors.
The National Sample Surveys (NSS) do not have a script that the interviewer reads out. They have schedules that must be completed. The interviewer is trained in concepts to be investigated and then left to fill the schedules to the best of his or her ability. Picture questioning a rural woman, busy juggling chapatis and a baby, “what was your primary activity over the last year? Is there another activity that you did for at least 30 days?” She thinks for a moment and says, “well, I looked after this baby and I cooked and had to take care of my mother-in-law when she was sick for a month”. Had the interviewer bothered to probe, she might have said and I also took care of a cow and sent my son to sell the milk and worked in my neighbour’s field. An experienced, well-trained investigator may know how to probe for this. However, with shortage of funds and trained personnel, the NSS increasingly relies on contract investigators hired for short periods, who lack these skills.
Do we need to return to the days of permanent employees or can we design our surveys to overcome errors committed by relatively inexperienced interviewers? A survey design experiment led by Neerad Deshmukh at the NCAER-National Data Innovation Centre provides an intriguing solution. In this experimental survey, interviewers first asked about the primary and secondary activity status of each household member, mimicking the NSS structure. They then asked a series of simple questions that included ones like, “do you cultivate any land?” If yes, “who in your household works on the farm?” Similar questions were asked about livestock ownership and about people caring for the livestock, ownership of petty business and individuals working in these enterprises. The results show that the standard NSS-type questions resulted in a WPR of 28 per cent for rural women in the age group 21-59, whereas the detailed activity listing found a WPR of 42 per cent — for the same women. This is an easily implementable module that does not require specialised knowledge on the part of the interviewer.
In our concern with ostensibly declining women’s work participation, we have missed out on identifying sectors from which women are excluded and more importantly, in which women are included. For rural men, ages 25-59, between 2004-5 and 2017-18, casual labour declined by about 6 percentage points. However, this decline is counter balanced by regular salaried work which increased by 4 percentage points. Thus, it seems likely that men are exchanging precarious employment with higher quality jobs. In contrast, women’s casual work has declined by 9 percentage points while their regular salaried work increased by a mere 1 percentage point. Moreover, the usual route to success, gaining formal education, has little impact on women’s ability to obtain paid work. Rural men with a secondary level of education have options like working as a postman, driver or mechanic — few such opportunities are open to women. It is not surprising that women with secondary education have only half the work participation rate compared to their uneducated sisters. Thus, the focus on employment for women needs to be on creating high quality employment rather than getting preoccupied with declining employment rates.
It may be time for us to return to the recommendations of ‘Shramshakti: Report of National Commission on Self Employed Women and Women in the Informal Sector’ and develop our data collection processes from the lived experiences of women and count women’s work rather than women workers. Without this, we run the risks of developing misguided policy responses.
This article first appreared in the print edition on March 17, 2020 under the title “Count work, not workers.” The writer is professor of sociology at University of Maryland and professor and centre director, NCAER-National Data Innovation Centre. Views are personal.
Source: Indian Express, 17/03/2020

NTA UGC NET 2020 information bulletin released, application begins

The online registration process for the UGC NET June 2020 will begin from today, March 16 to April 16, 2020, upto 11:50 pm.

National Testing Agency (NTA) has released the information bulletin for UGC National Eligibility Test (NET) June 2020 on its official website. Candidates can check the information bulletin online at ugcnet.nta.nic.in.
The online registration process for the UGC NET June 2020 will begin from today, March 16 to April 16, 2020, upto 11:50 pm. The last date of successful transaction of application fee through Credit Card/Debit Card/NetBanking/Paytm is April 17, 2020. The Admit card will be released on May 15.
The agency will be conducting the UGC NET 2020 exam from June 15 to 20, 2020, at various centres spread across the country. The result for which will be declared by July 5, 2020.
NTA conducts the UGC-NET exam for ‘Assistant Professor’ and for ‘Junior Research Fellowship and Assistant Professor. The test consists of two papers. Both the papers will be conducted in single three hour duration. The exam will be in computer based test mode.
Application fee:
Candidates belonging to the general category are required to pay an application fee of Rs 1000, while candidates from the General-EWS and OBC-NCL category needs to pay Rs 500.
For candidates coming from the reserved category, the registration fee is Rs 250.
However, processing charges & Goods and Services Tax (GST) are to be paid by the candidate, as applicable.
Educational Qualification:
•Candidates should have secured at least 55% marks (50% for the candidates under reserved category) in Master’s Degree from universities/institutions recognized by UGC.
•Candidates who are appearing for their qualifying Master’s degree (final year) examination.
•Candidates whose final exam’s results are still awaited.
•Candidates whose qualifying examinations have been delayed.
•Such candidates must complete their Masters degree within two years from the date of NET result with required percentage of marks, failing which they shall be treated as disqualified.
•For JRF, the candidates should not be more than 30 years old. There is relaxation of age for SC/ST/OBC, transgender, women, candidates having research experience, etc. For assistant professor exam, there is no upper age limit for applying.
Source: Hindustan Times, 16/03/2020

Coronavirus: How the public must respond to the global pandemic

Our preoccupation to protect ourselves should equal our obligation to keep the community healthy. When this is all over, it will rest on all of civilised society to exclude practices that put scores of people far and wide at risk

Coronavirus, one of eight pandemics in the last 100 years, might spread through droplets but the fear it invokes spreads in ways beyond containment. It has brought about a sense of uneasiness and uncertainty in equal measure, taking siege within our cognitive space. In this case, some fear is not only important but necessitates a shift in how we go about our lives. An encounter such as this serves to reset our moral fabric and obligation to society. It comes as a not-so-gentle reminder that the preservation of life takes precedence over our intrinsic desire to propagate self. While there seems to be a long journey ahead for the sick to recover, and for the families of those who succumbed to the virus, our prayers alone will not do.
HCoVs (Human Coronaviruses) are responsible for the common cold in about 10-35% of the cases and generally occur in late fall, winter and early spring. Sars and Mers that wreaked havoc in the past belong to the same family of virus. Historically, Sars (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) in 2002-2003 took the lives of around 800 people with a 10% mortality with a 90% burden clustered in Hong Kong and China. In contrast, Mers (Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome) inflicted significant burden on Saudi Arabia between 2012-2017 with a mortality rate, close to 34%. The H1N1 or swine flu that affected more than a billion people in 2009 had a mortality rate of 0.02%. Though mortality rate for COVID-19 is much lower, the number of documented cases of coronavirus is 15 times more than Sars, at this time. Hence, COVID-19 is unique in its ability to transmit with ease and severe enough to cause significant mortality.
Coronaviruses (CoVs) are enveloped viruses with an unusually large single stranded RNA genome with a unique replication strategy. Well, this may mean very little to many. Putting it simply, they are viruses with spikes in their surface that helps attach to a host, and in this case, human lung tissue. Once it attaches to the lung tissue, it replicates making copies of itself and damaging the lung tissue, making oxygen exchange very difficult. This is also the reason for early respiratory symptoms with COVID-19. This continues till the host’s immune system fights the intruder, like in a war scene. So, what can you do? The singular goal of the virus is to reach the lungs, and all that one can has to do is stop that from happening. This is easier said than done. This is also the reason to stay away from people who can transmit droplets through sneezing or coughing. This is referred to as social distancing. Regarding masks, conventional masks can be porous facilitating this transfer while the better N95 masks (incredibly uncomfortable to wear) are reserved for health care professionals and those with infection.
Epidemiologists and social scientists argue that wearing masks in the absence of any risk or signs of infection might make people touch their face more often than usual, further exacerbating risk. Moreover, piling up those masks at home, anticipating a doomsday will only prevent the ones who actually need it from procuring one. Remember, we are not any safer if the community around us is less safe, no matter how many masks we buy. Keeping the hands clean (a 120-second wash) is in line with this idea to kill the virus before it reaches the lungs. So, what will actually help is to use common-sense and follow safety instructions put forth by local health departments, assuming there is one. In the very young and the very old, the immune system is more likely to be compromised and, therefore, we see greater risk. The coronavirus affects every individual equally. However, it unequally and adversely impacts the elderly and those with a compromised immune system. More important, healthy people who are more likely to recover, can still transmit the disease to someone, older and sicker, who may not be as lucky. It is therefore imperative for the young and healthy to be obligated to protect the elderly. Remember, we will all get there, or at least we hope we do.
The idea of quarantine is the most critical in fighting this intruder. The longest incubation period for the virus to survive before it attaches to a host (in this case a person) is 14 days which is a lot longer than for the common flu which is three days. During this period, if the exposed quarantine themselves, while the sick diligently and carefully seek care through proper channels, and the healthy remain personally and socially responsible, we have what it takes to put a lid on this one. Yet, we struggle to do all of that. As testing becomes more easily available, the numbers will explode adding to the social media hysteria surrounding the illness, which is more tragic than the illness itself. Most data sources based on rates of infection point to a 2% fatality rate. Data on the fatality rate comes from across the world and could be significantly less depending on the country of residency. China, which is at the epicentre of this pandemic is home to much of these numbers. Even in China, only those who showed signs of severe symptoms were tested, further exaggerating the fatality rate. While morbidity is also related to overall burden, most will recover with traditional recovery numbers largely under-reported. So, quarantine will become the new normal in the coming weeks, and this means a significant disruption to the lifestyle we are used to. It is better to accept these as necessary for mitigating risk, which includes every one of us.
A single virus that originated from a single animal source transmitting an infection to one person has brought such a frenzy around the world beyond geographic borders, religion, socio-economic differences, education and political ideologies. It should invoke a personal reminder of the fragility of the human constitution and the importance of collective social responsibility. It is profoundly important in not just fighting and mitigating this imminent risk, but also prevent the next one from attaching to us, quite literally. Today, we witness empty playgrounds, schools, churches, temples and mosques, as we are encompassed by an alarming state of hyper- vigilance, which may be necessary to control this pandemic. Our preoccupation to protect ourselves should equal our obligation to keep the community healthy. When this is all over, it will rest on all of civilised society to exclude practices that put scores of people far and wide at risk.
Ravikumar Chockalingam is a psychiatrist and public health scholar at the US Department of Veterans Affairs, St. Louis, USA
Source: Hindustan Times, 16/03/2020

Data science is the new age engineering


With data and AI becoming the fuel for companies, demand for data science skills is growing exponentially

Many don’t understand what data science is, often mistaking it for data entry, database administrator or a similar entry-level job. Humans have learnt to use oil effectively by refining it. Data science is the ‘refining of data’ to make it useful, and unlike oil, every company needs to use data to solve complex issues. Consider the case of the new coronavirus. Using data science techniques, one can sift through massive volumes of data to detect and monitor the spread of this highly contagious virus. Companies like BlueDot, an AI startup, have developed a software that could determine the chances of disease occurrence. Data science started off as a tool used by banks to detect fraud but is now being used worldwide in areas such as internet search, health care, speech recognition, image recognition and even airline routing. “Data science is the present and the future of mankind and has the potential to revolutionise the way our life is organised today,” said Dr Abhijit Dasgupta, director of the Bachelor of Data Science program at SP Jain School of Global Management. This statement defines the way data science has evolved — as a lucrative and high-growth career option for youngsters. Big Data Analytics has already established its position as a pre-requisite for formulating effective and insightful business and communications strategies. For three years in a row, the role of a data scientist has been named the number one job in the US by Glassdoor. According to a report by the US Bureau of Labour Statistics, the rise of data science needs will create roughly 11.5 million job openings by 2026. The World Economic Forum predicts that by 2022, data scientists and analysts will become the number one emerging role in the world. Data science experts are needed in virtually every job sector, not just technology. In fact, five of the world’s biggest tech companies — Google, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Facebook — contributing to over 52 per cent of the world’s market capitalisation globally, are the biggest employers of data scientists and engineers. According to Glassdoor, in February 2020, the base pay for data science professionals touched an all-time high of AU$114,000 in Australia (average salaries were reported to be between AU$90,000 and AU$200,000 for a data science graduate vis-à-vis AU$40,000 – AU$60,000 for business graduates). In the US, the average data scientist salary is US$113,000, according to Glassdoor. With the demand of data scientists showing no immediate signs of slowing down, salaries for this position will continue to remain high, especially for those who have a degree in data science or related fields.

Source: Economic Times, 17/03/2020

The Season Of Lent


This is the holy season of Lent. The universal Church offers a 40-day reflective period. It’s time to look deeper within. There can be two simple reflective exercises to rejuvenate oneself and revivify one’s spiritual energies. Firstly, begin an introspective journey. We might have several pent-up emotions, weaknesses, scars of tragedies and down moments. And, this is the time for selfrenewal and amendment. There is also the possibility of having only strengths, joys, success and happy moments. Secondly, to start a retrospective journey in one’s heart and mind. This process will help in making us aware of ups and downs, highs and lows, joys and sorrows, and successes and failures. It will free us from all our worries, anxieties, tensions, depressions and stresses of day-to-day life. We may come across several questions pertaining to the life we live daily. The answers to these questions may make us strong in our will power. We are just travellers on a voyage. It may be a short one for some, while a long one for some others. Prayers, fasting, alms-giving, helping the poor and sacrificing should come from our hearts as goodwill gestures and not mere obligations. These special Lenten practices are meant to be observed throughout the year and not just for the Lenten season per se. We all are God’s children and we share the responsibility to help, support and care for one another. Reconciling differences within and with others will make a difference in this season of Lent for discovering the true Self.

Source: Economic Times, 17/03/2020

Monday, March 09, 2020

Quote of the Day


“Change before you have to.”
‐ Jack Welch
“मजबूरी की स्थिति आने से पहले ही परिवर्तन कर लें।”
‐ जैक वेल्च

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents


Vol. 55, Issue No. 10, 07 Mar, 2020

Letters

Editorials

From the Editor's Desk

From 50 Years Ago

Alternative Standpoint

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Special Articles

Economic Notes

Postscript

Current Statistics