PARIS.
As part of the Generation Equality Forum convened by UN Women and co-hosted by the governments of Mexico and France, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation today announced a commitment of $2.1 billion over the next five years to advance women’s economic empowerment, strengthen women and girls’ health and family planning, and accelerate women’s leadership.
The forum takes place in Paris from June 30 to July 2, 2021, bringing together governments, the private sector, and civil society partners to commit to specific actions and announce financial, political, and programmatic commitments that will accelerate gender equality and advance women’s rights. Not since the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995, when 47,000 participants and activists traveled to Beijing, has the world come together to take ambitious action that will have a transformational impact for women and girls.
“The world has been fighting for gender equality for decades,
but progress has been slow. Now is the chance to reignite a movement and
deliver real change," said Melinda French Gates, co-chair of the Gates
Foundation. "The beauty of our fight for gender equality is that every
human being will gain from it. We must seize this moment to build a better,
more equal future."
The forum takes place at a critical inflection point. While we have
seen progress over the past quarter century, nowhere on Earth are women on
equal footing with men. Waves of opposition to women’s rights have emerged, and
structural barriers to gender equality and women’s health still exist.
The foundation’s $2.1 billion commitment over the next five years will advance activity in three areas: economic empowerment, health and family planning, and accelerating women in leadership. Funding includes:
·
Economic Empowerment: $650 million over five
years: An expansion of the foundation’s existing work on women’s economic
empowerment, this funding will support women’s empowerment collectives,
strengthen the care economy, improve women’s financial inclusion, and reduce
barriers to paid work.
·
Family Planning and Health: $1.4 billion over
five years: This reaffirms and expands the foundation’s commitment to
family planning and women’s health, with a focus on increasing options and
access to contraceptives and support for a network of family planning partners,
including UNFPA Supplies
Partnership, Family Planning 2030, the Global Financing Facility, and the new
Shaping Equitable Market Access for Reproductive Health initiative.
·
Accelerating Women in Leadership:$100 million
over five years / $230 million over 10 years: This is an all-new funding
commitment to accelerate women’s inclusion in leadership roles, primarily in
health, law, and economics. It includes a contribution to a new
fund by Co-Impact that aims to dismantle systemic barriers to gender equality
and women and girls’ leadership around the world.
“Gender
equality must be at the center of the world’s efforts to make progress toward
the Sustainable Development Goals,” said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Gates
Foundation. “Prioritizing gender equality is not only the right thing to do, it
is essential to fighting poverty and preventable disease. The Generation
Equality Forum is an opportunity to hold leaders accountable so that we can
ensure that all people, everywhere, have the opportunity to live healthy,
productive lives.”
Today, the Gates Foundation also released
new data that show pandemic-driven inequality is growing at an alarming
pace, driven by disruptions to women’s health services, job losses in sectors
where women are overrepresented, and a sharp increase in caregiving needs and
other unpaid work. “Ripple effects
of the pandemic have conspired to rob women and girls of opportunity,"
said French Gates.
According to the International
Labour Organization:
·
Unemployment for women rose by 9 million in 2020 compared to 2019 and is
projected to increase another 2 million in 2021. This pattern is not true for
men, who are projected to see unemployment decrease in 2021.
·
Total global female employment in 2021 is expected to remain 13 million
below its 2019 level. By contrast, total male employment is expected to return
to close to its 2019 level, exacerbating existing inequalities in the
workforce.
New data by Eurasia Group also highlight that gender-equal
policies can fuel the global economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic:
·
Providing access to childcare for women around the world who currently
lack it could deliver up to$3 trillion of additional GDP each year by enabling
them to participate in the labor force.
·
Instituting cash transfer programs globally could lift up to 100 million
women out of absolute poverty, which is defined as living on less than $2 per
day.
“Women and girls already faced unique barriers to their full
participation in social and economic life, and the latest data show that the
pandemic has only sharpened gender disparities,” said Mark Suzman, CEO of the
Gates Foundation. “Each data point
represents a woman fighting for a better future, and this funding reflects our
longstanding commitment to support all women in their fight for a fairer and
more equal world.”
The foundation has been committed to family planning and women’s health since it began more than 20 years ago. For almost a decade, it has been supporting partners around the world to break down structural barriers that women and girls face and to advance women’s economic empowerment. Gender equality is core to the foundation’s work, and the Gender Equality division is focused on accelerating progress toward a more gender-equal world.