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Statistics and indicators on women and men

World's Women 2000: Chapter 5 - Work
Some important findings:
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Women now comprise an increasing share of the world's labour force---at least one third in all regions except northern Africa and western Asia.

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Self-employment and part-time and home-based work have expanded opportunities for women's participation in the abour force but are characterized by lack of security, lack of benefits, and low income.
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The informal sector is a larger source of employment for women than for men.
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More women than before are in the labour force throughout their reproductive years, though obstacles to combining family responsibilities with employment persist.
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Women, especially younger women, experience more unemployment than men and for a longer period of time than men.
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Women remain at the lower end of a segregated labour market and continue to be concentrated in a few occupations, to hold positions of little or no authority and to receive less pay than men.
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Available statistics are still far from providing a strong basis for assessing both quantitative and qualitative changes in women's employment.