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World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report 2017

World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report 2017 tells the women NGOs and Platforms that they need to work harder

According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report, Report of Global Rankings and the Gender Gap by country, 2017 we have below rankings for G20 countries:

  Global Index Economic Participation and Opportunity Educational Attainment Health and Survival Political Empowerment
1)France 11 64 1 54 9
2)Germany 12 43 98 70 10
3)United Kingdom 15 53 36 100 17
4)Canada 16 29 1 105 20
5)South Africa 19 89 64 1 18
6)Spain 24 81 45 81 22
7)Argentina 34 111 44 1 21
8)Australia 35 42 1 104 48
9)United States 49 19 1 82 96
10)Russian Federation 71 41 50 1 121
11)Mexico 81 124 53 58 34
12)Italy 82 118 60 123 46
13)Indonesia 84 108 88 60 63
14)Brazil 90 83 1 1 110
      Global Weighted Average    
15)China 100 86 102 144 77
16)India 108 139 112 141 15
17)Japan 114 114 74 1 123
18)Korea, Rep. 118 121 105 84 90
19)Turkey 131 128 101 59 118
20)Saudi Arabia 138 142 96 130 124

The numbers in the first column are the rank for each country among 144 countries of the world in the report.

As World Economic Forum (WEF) compiles the list county by country and as the G20 countries include European Union as a member, consequently there was no EU in the list of WEF. At my discretion, I included Spain instead of the European Union. It is possible to calculate a population weighted average for the European Uninon, but I have not taken the trouble to perform that task in this quick and shortened table extract for the G20 countries from the WEF report.

The tables gives me a fair understanding that we need to work much harder as women NGOs and platforms.

The full report is in the link: http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_GGGR_2017.pdf

In the report WEF takes our attention to many issues but I noted two issues for this reshaped short report: The first one is, absolute value of gender gaps in various countries is a combined result of their socioeceonomic policies – including probably their laws, rules, regulations and values as well as their cultural inheritances. Secondly, the report highlights the fact that there is strong correlation between a country’s gender gap and its economic performance. The less is the gender gap, the higher the country perfomance is. The index doesn’t try to put countries in front of each other but it tries to highlight the room for improvement for each country in order to be able to bring around better economic performance for that specific country.

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