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The Glass-Ceiling Index

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The Economist created the  Glass-Ceiling Index in 2013 to commemorate International Women�s Day (March 8 th ) .  Since then, it has been up...


The Economist created the Glass-Ceiling Index in 2013 to commemorate International Women�s Day (March 8th).  Since then, it has been updated every year around this date, using data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD),  European Commission and the International Labor Organization (ILO), among other organizations.


The index covers 29 OECD countries and considers 10 indicators, such as women�s access to higher education, labor force participation, wage gap, business-school applications, representation in senior management and the cost of child care. The higher the overall score a country receives, the better the environment is for working women. The index rates countries on a scale of 0 to 100.


As one can see in the chart, this year the leading positions in the ranking are occupied by Nordic countries (Iceland, Norway, Sweden and Finland) where one can find similar levels of labor participation among men and women. Some common characteristics in these nations are large percentages of women with higher education degrees, lower gender wage-gaps, and higher female presence in company boards and in the Legislative chambers.


On the opposite side of the ranking there are countries like Japan, Turkey and South Korea, where women tend to have less higher education degrees than men, lower workforce participation and less presence in senior positions. The difference of wages for men and women is larger, too.


In 2016, a new indicator has been added to the index: paternity leave. Several studies have shown that as new fathers use this benefit, mothers tend to return to the labor market after giving birth, contributing then to reduce the earning gap between men and women. Of the countries considered in this index, paternity paid leave is generally short (eight weeks on average). Even though they show poor environments for working women in the overall index, Japan and South Korea stand out among OECD countries for having the longest paid leave for fathers and mothers (more than 50 weeks of paid leave). Countries like Canada, Italy and Britain don�t have this type of benefit for fathers and the U.S is the only country on this ranking that doesn�t have paid maternal leave.


As no country has the maximum score in the index, there are plenty of opportunities for improvement, even among top-ranked nations. For example, even though OECD women are more likely to have a degree than men, they have fewer opportunities to participate in the workforce and receive lower salaries. Some variables that explain this problem are the careers women are choosing and the costs associated with childbearing.

With this interactive chart you can create your own Glass Ceiling Index, varying the weights of each indicator http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2016/03/daily-chart-0

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ohona: The Glass-Ceiling Index
The Glass-Ceiling Index
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