The Huffington Post
October 24, 2012
Gender equality has been more of a national focus than usual in the
United States over the past few months, thanks to the 2012 presidential
election. Republican nominee Mitt Romney recently discussed the "binders full of women" that he tried to hire when he was governor of Massachusetts, and President Barack Obama touched upon the importance of "protecting women's rights" around the world during the third and final presidential debate Monday.
But how does the United States stack up against other countries when it comes to said gender equality? According to the 2012 Global Gender Gap Report, released on October 23rd by the World Economic Forum, we're only 22nd best.
The report ranks 135 countries (which collectively contain over 90
percent of the world's population) based on 14 indicators used to
measure the size of a nation's gender gap in four key areas:
1. Economic participation and opportunity, which includes female labor force participation, wage equality and the percentage of women in high-ranking jobs.
2. Educational attainment, which looks at female literacy and how frequently women are enrolled in higher education.
3. Health and survival, which is measured by comparing female and male life expectancy and mortality rates.
4. Political empowerment, which examines the number of
women holding political office as well as the number of female heads of
state over the last 50 years.
To continue reading.......
No comments:
Post a Comment