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Capitalism, Globalization and the Perpetuation of Women’s Oppression: a Vicious Cycle

Decent Essays

CAPITALISM, GLOBALIZATION AND THE PERPETUATION OF WOMEN'S OPPRESSION: A VICIOUS CYCLE

By Kelsey Lavoie
NDYA, Provincial Youth Liason

According to the World Bank, women make up 70% of the world’s poor and their wages world wide are on average 50% to 80% of men’s. One third of all households word wide are headed by women, they are responsible for half the world’s food production, and yet they own just one per cent of the world’s property. The majority of workers in sweatshops are women and the majority of unpaid labour is done by women in every region of the world. Further, women make up two-thirds of the one billion people who are illiterate and 60% of the 100 million who have no access to primary education.

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Such policies also lead to a decline in quality and increased costs for all public systems, such as access to tap water, electricity, and public transport. Women are the first to pay for these measures entailing harsher living conditions and a significant increase in the free labour they must perform. When education and medical care have to be paid for in these dependent countries, girls are the first to be taken out of school, or deprived of vaccinations.

Furthermore, the extension on the world scale of commodity relations reinforces the system of prostitution and other forms of human trafficking (new forms of slavery) of which women are, of course, the primary victims.

Not only do the structures and process of global capitalism exacerbate women’s situation of oppression, they depend on it. Without women’s oppression within the family, capitalism could not perpetuate all realms of society in the way it currently does.

Many argue that the globalization of capitalism has helped emancipate women by questioning traditional forms of domination and giving women access to wage labour and thus their own source of income. This is the outlook of the World Bank that is making use of a gender perspective from a neo-liberal outlook (globalization provides greater

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