The ILO approach is focused on breaking the cycle of gender inequalities that trap women in informal, low-paid jobs without any social protection, both during their working lives and in old age. This requires removing barriers to both accessing the labour market and social protection schemes. Depending on their design, social protection systems can increase, perpetuate or reduce gender inequalities. It is therefore important to ensure that gender-responsiveness is mainstreamed into all social protection technical advisory services.
Baseline
- Women still experience significantly lower social protection coverage than men, a discrepancy that largely reflects and reproduces their lower labour force participation rates, higher levels of part-time and temporary work and of informal employment, gender pay gaps and a disproportionately high share of unpaid care work, which national social protection strategies often fail to recognize.
- These outcomes are associated with persistent patterns of inequality, discrimination and structural disadvantage for women. Furthermore, women with children are at an even greater disadvantage and face a triple motherhood penalty: compared with both men and women without children they are less likely to be employed, they earn lower wages (whereas fathers are likely to earn higher wages than men without children) and they are less likely to work in managerial or leadership positions.
- In the COVID-19 crisis, women have been affected by employment loss more than men and more women than men are leaving the workforce, perhaps as a result of intensified unpaid workloads. Some of the gains made in gender equality over recent decades are therefore being reversed.
Source: World Social Protection Report 2020-22: Social protection at the crossroads - in pursuit of a better future International Labour Office - Geneva: ILO, 2021
Standards and Guiding Principles
Approach and Technical Support
Latest ILO Projects and Programmes
- ONE UN Joint Programme on Social Protection in Mozambique
- Building Social Protection Floors for All - Phase II
- Accelerating the Achievement of Universal Social Protection to Leave No One Behind
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All interventions
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Indicators of results and impact
Key Results
- Subsequent to the ratification of the ILO Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952 (No, 102), the Parliament of Iraq has successfully passed the new Social Security Law for Private Sector Workers on 17 May 2023, which is aligned with Convent...
- Les branches Maladie et Maternité ont été reformées
- The Social Security Organization created an Actuarial Bureau
- A través de la creación de programas no contributivos se amplió el número de trabajadores cubiertos por la seguridad de ingresos a trabajadores independientes e informales, beneficiando a más de 1.330.000 trabajadores y trabajadoras
- Les paramètres techniques et financiers du régime de sécurité sociale des travailleurs indépendants ont été validés
- Le Premier Bulletin des statistiques sur la protection sociale a été validé
Publicaciones
News and Events
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Getting social protection policies right is key for gender equality. Check out the event recording!
Media 16.04.2025
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ILO launches project to strengthen social protection for domestic and community-based care workers in Sri Lanka
News 26.02.2025
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Advancing social protection and maternity insurance reform in Sri Lanka
Training 24.01.2025 - 27.01.2025
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ILO and UNDP build capacity for trade unions on Gender Equality and Poverty Reduction
Events 17.10.2024 - 17.10.2024
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INSS staff in Angola trained in simplifying bureaucratic processes
Training 16.10.2024 - 18.10.2024
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Senegal: A social protection benefit transformed our daily lives (Voices)
Media 20.01.2025
Multimedia
Wodsak, Veronika