IN 1925, delivering a speech at a women's conference in Gujarat's Sojitra village, Mahatma Gandhi had said: "As long as the women of India do not take part in public life, there can be no salvation for the country." Nearly a century later, the Narendra Modi government has sought to institutionalise women's participation in public life at the highest level by introducing the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (Salutation to Women Power Bill), which will reserve a third of the seats in the Lok Sabha and the state assemblies for women. With five states going to the polls this year and the general election coming up next year, the bill has been timed to directly appeal to women voters, who have been the backbone of the BJP's electoral success in the past decade. True to his style, the PM caught the Opposition parties off-guard, forcing them to become grudging cheerleaders even as the BJP goes to town cornering credit for a legislation that aims to be a game-changer in electoral politics.
With India's abysmally poor record in women's representation in Parliament and state legislatures, this bill has been waiting to see the light of day for nearly three decades. In the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Index, which maps the gender gap in countries across four dimensions economic opportunities, education, health and political leadership-India has consistently ranked below 100 out of nearly 150 countries. An April 2023 report by the McKinsey Global Institute estimated that India could add up to $770 billion, or more than 18 per cent, to its GDP by 2025 if it gave its women equal opportunities. Currently, women’s contribution to the country’s GDP is just 18 per cent, among the lowest in the world, with only 25 per cent of India’s labour force being female.
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