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Article | "Corporate India - Inhospitable to Working Women"

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Corporate India - Inhospitable to Working Women

- by Rabia Dhody *

Page - 1

"Whatever women do, they must do twice as well as men to be thought half as good. Luckily, this is not difficult."

- Charlotte Whiton

Indeed, it is not uncommon today to find women in most industries; in fact, they occupy top positions at that. They are no longer restricted to stereotyped professions. Deftly handling even the toughest of jobs, ranging from bus-conductors to astronauts, women have shown that they indeed are not the typecast weaker sex. However, studies across the globe have shown that men outnumber women by almost 5:1 at the middle management level and, believe it or not, by 20:1 at the senior level of management. What is the reason for this strange discrepancy? Male ego / chauvinism? Or certain factors typical of women?

A national daily recently ran a news-story saying that at the turn of the century, big names in India Inc. treasure an unwritten code: "Do not employ women." Surprised? Not really, as experts say, that a mere 3 per cent women occupy senior positions in private companies across India. And most of the companies only have 5-6 per cent women employees.

What is more, a national daily quoted Pallavi Jha, former Chairperson of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), as saying, "A study on women graduates of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, showed that more than 70 per cent do not pursue a career." So can we say that the corporate India is inhospitable to working women? The young woman of today is the victim of a double cross. On the one hand, her college training or her work experience taught her to make a living, not to make a cake. So to one half of her being, success has come to mean just what it does to a man - success in a job.

There's one very interesting point we miss out, on which one cannot find 'women' as a singular category in any country or community. In the last decade, women in other parts of the industrialized world have experienced what is popularly known as the 'glass-ceiling' phenomenon. What are the factors that create these omnipresent glass-ceilings? Glass-ceilings that promise the women the sky and the stars but stop them from reaching there after they attain a certain height.

Undeniably, all women go through the torture of balancing their work and family lives. Though a work-life balance is an issue for all employees, irrespective of their sex, it seems to assail women the most. Even with a great spouse and family to support them, the conflicts between office and home do not resolve. More often than not, this drains women not just emotionally but physically as well.

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Rabia Dhody is an MBA from University of Pune, and is currently working as HR Manager with Reliance Capital - Life Insurance Division.






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