Kathmandu, Feb. 19
To highlight the 'vital yet undervalued and
invisible' role of care work, the Embassy of Canada to Nepal and the
International Labour Organization (ILO) Nepal organised a dialogue on 'Advancing
Decent Work and the Care Economy' in Kathmandu on Tuesday.
According to them, a strong care economy
leads to a healthier workforce, job creation, and increased productivity.
However, care workers, especially women, often face low wages, poor working
conditions, and lack social protections.
Numan Özcan, Director of the ILO Country
Office Nepal, said that care work is the silent force that many often don’t
realise, but it keeps societies and economies running. It is a shared
responsibility for all governments, employers, and workers to promote
international labour standards, invest in research, expand care services, and
close financing gaps.
"We stand ready to support Nepal’s
journey in building a resilient, inclusive, and sustainable care economy,” he
said.
In June 2024, the International Labour
Conference (ILC) adopted a
resolution concerning decent work and the care economy, further
refining the definition of care work. An action plan for implementing the
resolution’s conclusions is currently being discussed globally.
A joint study on 'Public Investments in
Nepal’s Care Economy' commissioned by the ILO, UN Women, and the National
Planning Commission (NPC) of Nepal, revealed that investing Rs. 272,232 million
(approximately US$ 1,957,348,080) to address Nepal’s care coverage gaps in
education and health would generate a total of 1,386,000 jobs (directly and
indirectly), with at least 60 per cent of them filled by women.
Likewise, the 16th National
Development Plan of Nepal prioritizes the promotion of decent work and the care
economy under productive employment, decent work, and sustainable social
security, healthy, educated, and skilled human resource capital, and gender
equality, social justice and an inclusive society.
Dr. Prakash Kumar Shrestha, a member of the
NPC, said that Nepal as a pathfinder country of Global Accelerator on Jobs
and Social Protection for Just Transitions has care as one of the priority
sectors.
Ian Trites, First Secretary, Embassy of
Canada to Nepal, said that Canada remains committed to supporting Nepal in
advancing decent work and gender equality within the care economy.
Likewise, Patricia Fernandez-Pacheco,
Country Representative of the UN Women Nepal, stated that promoting decent work
in the care economy is a key pathway to advancing women’s economic empowerment
and achieving gender equality.
Speaking on the occasion, representatives
of workers’ organisations highlighted issues such as low wages, lack of social
protection, and difficulties in unionisation. Meanwhile, representatives of
employers’ organisations pointed out key challenges, including low skill levels
among care workers, lack of policies for protecting and financing the care
sector, and regulatory gaps.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 20 February 2025.
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