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World Economic Forum Report Gives the World 81 Years to Close Gender Gap: Ghana Performs Poorly

Being a woman is difficult
Being a woman is difficult

Issues of gender equality and feminism has been floating around the airwaves for a while now since Duncan Williams went and shot off his mouth in his pulpit, and against that backdrop the report from the World Economic Forum (WEF) on the gender gap engenders little optimism for females.

Launched in Geneva last week, the report took into account nine years of data collected in 142 countries worldwide since the last report in 2006, measuring the gender disparity in four key areas: economic participation and opportunity, education, political participation, and health and survival.

And the report places the global gender gap in the workplace (economic participation and opportunity), at 60% worldwide, up 4% from the 2006 figure of 56%. Taking into account the progression over nine years and their projections; the global gender gap is set to be totally closed by 2095 if all things remain equal.

Ghana ranked 101 out of the 142 countries, down from 76 on last year’s Gender Gap Index. Ghana performed poorly in three out of the four sectors, deteriorating in economic participation, health, and economic empowerment. It was only in educational attainment that Ghana improved from 123 to 117 worldwide.

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