All posts tagged: Informal economy

More Indian women take up jobs, and still shoulder most household chores

More Indian women take up jobs, and still shoulder most household chores

According to the latest survey, the share of urban women who do unpaid household work has increased. | Photo Credit: NAGARA GOPAL While an increasing number of urban women are entering paid employment, the share of them who do unpaid household work, such as cooking, shopping, and caring for children and the elderly, has also grown. This means that the deep gender divide in doing household chores largely remains unchanged in India. Although more urban men are participating in domestic work now, with the share going up considerably in recent years, the gender divide persists as the share of such women is already very high and growing. Notably, these trends are consistent across most States, with the exception of some north-eastern States, where a relatively higher proportion of urban men participate in household chores. Chart 1 shows the share of urban men and women (above six years of age) who did paid work in India in 2019 and 2024. Among urban women the share increased from 15.5% to 18% — a 2.5% point rise — while …

Dreams, doubts abound in Dharavi

Every morning, Asha, a 27-year-old schoolteacher, wakes up at the crack of dawn to help her disabled mother get ahead of the long queues outside the community toilets in central Mumbai’s Dharavi, Asia’s largest slum, where around 11 lakh urban poor live cheek by jowl in over 1.2 lakh cramped, tin-roofed shanties in a maze of crowded, winding alleys spread over 600 acres of premium land in the heart of the country’s financial capital. “All I want from the redevelopment is a house with an attached toilet,” she says, referring to the ₹20,000-crore Dharavi redevelopment project, which Adani Realty, the real estate arm of the Adani Group, bagged on November 29, with a bid of ₹5,069 crore. The bid is an initial investment for the project, touted as “the world’s largest urban renewal scheme”, which aims at demolishing hutments and rehabilitating around 6.5 lakh residents within seven years in 300 sq. ft flats in a cluster of high-rises. The project will cover the entire 600-acre area and free up around 5 crore sq. ft of …