- April 18, 2021
- Categories: Greece, Switzerland
Written by Diana Markaki – Bartholdi, Founder – the Boardroom
Even in the best of times, being a woman leader comes with extra challenges, as women are often held to higher performance standards and blamed more for failures. Senior-level women are often the only woman in the room at work, and “Only” women are more likely to have their judgment questioned and need to provide more evidence of their competence.
While most people’s lives and work have been negatively affected by the crisis, women’s jobs and livelihoods are more vulnerable to the COVID-19 pandemic, estimating that female job loss rates are about 1.8 times higher than male job loss rates globally. The situation is further aggravated by traditional societal mindsets about the role of women and the belief of some male leaders that men have more right to a job than women when jobs are scarce, as is the case during the pandemic.
And as the pandemic drives women out of the workforce at staggering rates, the women who remain continue to face increasing pressures and challenges. According to a recent survey carried out by Chief:
· 30% of members surveyed said the pandemic is knocking them off their career course
· 24% are planning on leaving their companies sooner
Women do an average of 75% of the world’s total unpaid-care work, including childcare, caring for the elderly, cooking, and cleaning. And in the words of Melinda Gates, “the economy is ‘built on the backs of women’s unpaid labor’”.
Companies risk losing women in leadership—and future women leaders—and unwinding years of painstaking progress toward gender diversity. The decisions they make today will impact generations of women to come.
The pandemic has made a bad situation much worse. Women have lost more jobs than men have during the recession. In this “she-cession” we should not remain silent and we should fight the good fight.
Posted here on LinkedIn.