WorldBank Gender. 1818 H St. NW. Washington, DC 20433. kschrader@worldbank.org. The World Bank Group has been promoting gender equality in development since 1977. Yet today, in many parts of the world, women continue to lack voice and decision-making ability; and their economic opportunities remain very
Japanwas ranked 116th out of 146 countries in the Global Gender Gap Report announced by the World Economic Forum on July 13, 2022. Although this was four places higher than its position at 120th
Thereport's Gender Gap Index ranks countries according to calculated gender gap between women and men in four key areas: health, education, economy and politics
VirtualMedia Briefing on the Global Gender Gap Report 2022. Read more. In this series. Global Gender Gap Report 2023. Read more. In this series. Global Gender Gap Report 2021. Read more. In this series. Global Gender Gap Report 2020. Read more. About Us. Our Mission; Our Impact; Leadership and Governance; Partners;
EspaƱaocupa el puesto 14 de los 156 paĆses que integran la lista y ha registrado un retroceso durante la pandemia: en 2020 habĆa cerrado el 79,5% de la
Gendergaps in smartphone ownership and overall mobile ownership also remain relatively unchanged and stand at 7% and 17%, respectively. This slowdown in digital inclusion and the fact that mobile gender gaps are not reducing is concerning as we move to an increasingly connected world. The Mobile Gender Gap Report 2023 explores the latest
Atthe current rate of change, the global gender gap will not close for another 100 years. As the Secretary-General warned , āchange is coming at a pace that is too slow for the women and girls
Onthe current pace of reforms, global gender gaps are estimated to close, using deterministic (linear or log-linear) trends, over the next three centuries. This means that many women will likely not be able to fully use their abilities and talents, to the detriment of societies, for a long time. Yet this paper shows that, absent a significant step up in
WorldCould Achieve āGender Dividendā of $172 Trillion from Closing Lifetime Earnings Gaps. WASHINGTON, March 3, 2020 ā A new report from the World Bank Group released ahead of International Womenās Day shows that the world could achieve a āgender dividendā of $172 trillion by closing gaps in lifetime labor earnings
Thereport this year covers 146 countries, including for the first time Comoros. On the other hand, Bahamas, Cuba, Croatia, Iraq, Mauritania, Papua New Guinea, Russian Federation, Syria, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela and Yemen are not covered in the 2022 index. Among the 146 countries included this year, a constant set of 102 countries have
mywi6Ht.