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Female domestic workers: Income determinants and empowerment correlates—A case study

By: Bhattacharjee, Sanghita and Goswami, Bhaskar.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: The Indian Journal of Labour Economics Description: 63(2), Apr-Jun, 2020: p.483-498.Subject(s): Female domestic workers, Informal, Empowerment, Cumulative Empowerment Index, South 24 Parganas In: The Indian Journal of Labour EconomicsSummary: This paper deploys the information of 300 female domestic workers who work to make up the difference between subsistence requirements and the total earnings of the family. The determinants of monthly income of the workers are age, type of work, total family members, per-capita monthly household income, year of schooling and number of houses serviced. Low wages, low level of education, less control over assets and income, verbal and physical abuse and the absence of social security are reflected in their weak bargaining power which results in a low level of empowerment. Women’s earnings do not always ensure empowerment, especially when the wages are low. Meaningful legal safeguards, welfare measures and other provisions for empowerment must be inducted in modern society to reduce injustices, deprivations and indignities towards female domestic workers. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
63(2), Apr-Jun, 2020: p.483-498 Available AR124035

This paper deploys the information of 300 female domestic workers who work to make up the difference between subsistence requirements and the total earnings of the family. The determinants of monthly income of the workers are age, type of work, total family members, per-capita monthly household income, year of schooling and number of houses serviced. Low wages, low level of education, less control over assets and income, verbal and physical abuse and the absence of social security are reflected in their weak bargaining power which results in a low level of empowerment. Women’s earnings do not always ensure empowerment, especially when the wages are low. Meaningful legal safeguards, welfare measures and other provisions for empowerment must be inducted in modern society to reduce injustices, deprivations and indignities towards female domestic workers. – Reproduced

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