Jobs in Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Malaysia : Allyhunt

Allyhunt is a job portal for job interview tips, free listing of part time jobs, jobs for fresh graduates, manager jobs and more in Malaysia.


Already a member?




Lost your password?

Retrieve it!

Share |

Employment: Men Lost More Than Women Mar 18 2010

The global recession has caused more men than women lose their jobs around the world, following a pattern already well established in the United States.

Men held more of the jobs lost in nearly all the nations where executives were surveyed by Accenture, a management consulting firm.

In India, executives said 95 percent of their layoffs were men; in France men accounted for 71 percent of job losses. The survey, conducted between November 2009 and mid-February 2010, asked executives how many men and women had been fired or laid off in the preceding year.

Executives also fired more men than women in Australia, Canada, Germany, Mexico, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, it said. In the United States, men held 54 percent of jobs lost to women’s 46 percent.

“In some cases the majority of the work force was men, so most men got impacted,” said Nellie Borrero, who heads global human capital and diversity at Accenture. “It could also mean that companies were more vigilant in insuring that a lot of women would not be impacted.”

In the United States, men dominate industries hardest hit by recession, such as heavy manufacturing and construction, while women dominate less hard-hit fields such as health services and education, statistics have shown.

A different story on gender and job loss came from the Netherlands, where women accounted for 51 percent of jobs losses, Accenture said. In China the losses were split evenly between the genders.

Accenture surveyed 524 senior executives in medium to large companies in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Source: Reuters »

On another note, this is pointing to an interesting trend that is happening right beneath our feet. More than fifty years ago, women found in the workforce, working side by side with men is an uncommon sight. But now, when brains mattered more than brute strength, women share the same advantage as men.

I am no feminist but clearly, the relentless rise of the service sector has helped the fairer gender to compete as well, sometimes even better than men.

Women have certainly traveled a long way when not so long ago we were viewed nothing more than a piece of property.

Comments Disabled

Please login or create an account in order to comment on this page.