Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

Ahead of the 2030 deadline, there are large gaps in the data on gender equality

Nepali miners unload sacks of coal near the village of Tila, Rolpa district, the heartland of Maoist insurgents in western Nepal, February 12, 2006. Aid agencies estimate at least 200,000 of Nepal's 26 million people are refugees. At least as many more have left their homes uncounted, many now living with relatives in crowded and impoverished cities or in slums. Millions have also been forced to head south to India in search of work, where they toil as labourers or household servants. Picture taken on February 12, 2006.  REUTERS/Desmond Boylan - GM1DRZALJQAA

Governments do not prioritise data collection on issues affecting girls and women. Image: REUTERS/Desmond Boylan

Emma Batha
Journalist, Thomson Reuters Foundation

World leaders who have pledged to end gender inequality by 2030 will miss the ambitious target if they do not accelerate efforts to plug "profound" data gaps, experts said ahead of launching a new gender index on Wednesday.

Global partnership Equal Measures 2030, which is overseeing the index, said data had the power to hold governments to account, highlight hidden issues and change laws, policies and budget decisions.

"Data saves lives," Equal Measures director Alison Holder told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "It captures the attention of policy makers and focuses their efforts on the right issues."

But she said a survey of more than 600 experts from 50 countries showed most believed that governments did not prioritise data collection on issues affecting girls and women.

World leaders agreed in 2015 on 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aimed at helping everyone live healthier, more prosperous lives on a cleaner planet.

The SDG Gender Index, which aims to measure whether the world is on track to meet its promises to achieve gender equality, includes data on poverty, health, education, employment, violence, taxation and climate change.

Holder said results for the first countries covered by the index – Colombia, El Salvador, India, Indonesia, Kenya and Senegal – showed a mixed picture.

"Every country has major gender equality challenges they are grappling with. This is why we need a new index to measure and track performance," she added.

Senegal scored well on political representation with 42 percent of parliamentary seats held by women compared to 12 percent in India.

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But about half of women in Senegal believed a husband was justified in beating his wife in certain circumstances, compared to 3 percent in Colombia.

Although El Salvador did well on health, its femicide rate was nearly 60 times that of Indonesia.

The six countries, representing more than a fifth of girls and women worldwide, will be home to nearly 1 billion girls and women by 2030. The full index will be available in 2019.

The launch comes amid wider warnings that gaps in data collection will make it hard to measure SDG progress by the 2030 deadline.

The United Nations is organising a major conference in Dubai next month to brainstorm ideas for improving data gathering in areas such as health, migration, poverty, hunger and the environment.

"We could miss meeting SDG targets because of data gaps," said Ruth Fuller of the Bond umbrella group of international development organisations. "We need better tracking to see what progress is being made ... and right now that's missing."

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