Asia | Jobs v the patriarchy

Can women-only factories help more Indian women into work?

Ola, an electric-scooter manufacturer, is trying to find out

Indian women at work in a factory.
Photograph: Atul Loke/The New York Times/Redux/Eyevine
|POCHAMPALLI, INDIA and MANIKGANJ, BANGLADESH

WHEN KAVIPRIYA, a 22-year-old from a village in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, decided to take a factory job, her family was not thrilled. “My mother-in-law wanted me to stay at home and look after my two-year-old son,” she explains. Her relatives eventually came around when they realised that Kavipriya would be earning good money to supplement her husband’s income as a cab driver.

Women like her are still unusual. In 2023 only 33% of Indian women were active in the labour market, compared with around 50% of women globally and 37% in neighbouring Bangladesh, with which India shares many economic and social characteristics. The only countries where fewer women work are a handful of conservative Muslim countries across North Africa and the Middle East, Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and Pakistan, India’s troubled neighbour. Yet Kavipriya’s experience also illustrates one way of bringing more women into work: by designing jobs in a way that is acceptable to them and their families.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline "Women’s work"

How strong is India’s economy?

From the April 27th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Lawrence Wong in his own words

Singapore’s next prime minister sat down with The Economist

Singapore has achieved astounding economic success

Can Lawrence Wong, its incoming PM, oversee further growth?


An interview with Lawrence Wong, Singapore’s next PM

He will be just the fourth person to hold that position