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How India’s Women & Girls Have Fared In The Modi Years

More of India's women are accessing maternal healthcare, more girls are in high school but few women are in the labour force, and many of those who are working are engaged in low-quality poorly paid work.

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India's women and girls

India's women and girls | Representative image | iStockphto.com: Suprabhat Dutta

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“We cannot achieve success if 50% of our population being women are locked at home,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi is quoted as saying, in this press release from March 2023. Development led by India's women was one of the themes in last year’s G20 summit, which India had presided over.

India ranks 108 of 193 countries on the Gender Inequality Index in 2022, an improvement of 14 positions from the previous year. The index, computed by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), ranks countries based on reproductive health, labour market opportunities and empowerment of women.

Women’s leadership in the various development programmes launched by the government led to the improvement in the utilisation of these services, according to Akhila Sivadas, Executive Director of the Centre for Advocacy and Research.

Ahead of the general elections beginning this week, we look at critical indicators to study the state of India's women and girls. More women are now giving birth in a health facility and getting at least four antenatal care visits, but the poorest women still have low levels of maternal care. The sex ratio at birth has increased overall, but this masks regional disparities with several states still performing poorly.

More girls are enrolling in secondary school and drop-out rates at that level have fallen, but still, three in five girls aged 16 to 18 years are out of school, according to the gross enrolment data for grades XI and XII. Further, more than three in five women are out of the labour force, and while unemployment rates have fallen to under 3%, this number masks much under-employment, studies show.

The rate of crime against wom

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