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India’s Gender Gap: A Warning Signal, Not Just a Ranking
Context India is positioned as a rising global power—economically dynamic, digitally driven, and home to the world’s youngest population. Yet, the 2025 Global Gender Gap Report by the World Economic Forum, which ranks India 131 out of 148 countries, reveals a serious contradiction: gender inequality continues to be a fundamental barrier to inclusive progress. Understanding the Gender Gap: Structural Failures Key Areas of Concern: India''s lowest scores come from:
Despite notable progress in educational access, this hasn’t translated into improved employment, well-being, or economic autonomy for women. Persistent Structural Issues:
Skewed Health Outcomes: A Crisis in Waiting Anaemia Crisis: Over 57% of Indian women (15–49 years) are anaemic, undermining:
Policy Inadequacies:
Economic Exclusion and the Invisible Burden Disparity in Labour Participation:
Missed Opportunity: A 2015 McKinsey report predicted that closing the gender gap could boost India’s GDP by $770 billion by 2025—a goal now out of reach. Unpaid Labour and Underrepresentation:
Demographic Crossroads: The Urgency of Inclusion India’s demographic landscape is shifting:
What This Means:
From Slogans to Systems: The Need for Structural Reform India has the policies and frameworks—what’s missing is real investment and implementation. Key Actions Needed:
Conclusion: A Call for Transformative Action India’s ambition to become a global superpower will remain unrealized if it excludes half its population.
What India Needs Now:
The era of slogans has passed. It’s time for real, measurable investment in gender equity.
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