The feminization of foreign currency earnings: women's labor in Sri Lanka

J Dev Areas. 1998 Spring;32(3):303-26.

Abstract

PIP: This paper considers women's participation in foreign currency earning activities in Sri Lanka. The author first analyzes the structure of women's participation patterns in the major foreign currency earning activities in the country, including consideration of their wage levels and the impact of ethnicity, age, educational levels, and skills upon the different components of those activities in which women participate. She then probes the applicability for Sri Lanka of Guy Standing's argument that structural adjustment policies (SAP) have triggered a change in labor force practices leading to a feminization through flexible labor. Many studies have shown that cutbacks in subsidies mandated by SAPs and initiated in the 1980s among developing countries have adversely affected poor women. Women have adjusted to the new situation in a variety of ways, ranging from cutting their household budgets for basic needs to seeking income-generating work in the informal sector and participating in labor-intensive manufacturing activities. In closing, the author assesses the degree to which the new demands made upon women resulting from the effect of SAPs upon their households have stimulated women's increasing participation in foreign currency earning activities.

MeSH terms

  • Asia
  • Developing Countries
  • Economics*
  • Employment*
  • Feminism*
  • Health Workforce
  • Industry*
  • Interpersonal Relations*
  • Salaries and Fringe Benefits*
  • Sri Lanka
  • Women*