India slips to 131st position in Global Gender Gap Index 2025

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     New Delhi, Jun 12 (PTI) India has ranked 131 out of 148 countries in the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Report 2025, slipping two places from its position last year.
     With a parity score of just 64.1 per cent, India is among the lowest-ranked countries in South Asia, according to the report released on Thursday.
     India ranked 129 last year out of 146 countries.
     "In 2025, India ranks 131st, with an overall gender parity score of 64.4 per cent. Compared to the 2024 edition, India sees a relative drop in rank due to the performance of other economies," it said.
     The Global Gender Gap Index measures gender parity across four key dimensions: Economic Participation and Opportunity, Educational Attainment, Health and Survival, and Political Empowerment.
     The Indian economy's overall performance improved in absolute terms by +0.3 points.
     "One of the dimensions where India increases parity is in Economic Participation and Opportunity, where its score improves by +.9 percentage points to 40.7 per cent. While most indicator values remain the same, parity in estimated earned income rises from 28.6 per cent to 29.9 per cent, positively impacting the subindex score," the report said.
     Scores in labour force participation rate remained the same (45.9 per cent) as last year -- India's highest achieved to date.
     In educational attainment, the report said, India scored 97.1 per cent, reflecting positive shifts in female shares for literacy and tertiary education enrolment, which resulted in positive score improvements for the subindex as a whole.
     "India also records higher parity in health and survival, driven by improved scores in sex ratio at birth and in healthy life expectancy," it said.
     However, similar to other countries, parity in healthy life expectancy is obtained despite an overall reduction in the life expectancy of men and women, the report said.
     "Where India records a slight drop in parity (-0.6 points) since the last edition is in Political Empowerment. Female representation in Parliament falls from 14.7 per cent to 13.8 per cent in 2025, lowering the indicator score for the second year in a row below 2023 levels," it said.
     Similarly, the share of women in ministerial roles falls from 6.5 per cent to 5.6 per cent, moving the indicator score (5.9 per cent) further away this year from its highest level (30 per cent in 2019), it said.
     With notable gains in political empowerment and economic participation, Bangladesh emerged as the best performer in South Asia, jumping 75 ranks to rank 24 globally.
     Nepal ranked 125, Sri Lanka 130, Bhutan 119, Maldives 138 and Pakistan ranked at the bottom among all countries at 148.
     "In 2025, Southern Asia ranks 7th, with a gender parity score of 64.6 per cent. Of the seven economies that make up the regional block, only Bangladesh (24th, 77.5 per cent) places in the top 50," the report said.
     In Economic Participation and Opportunity, the region scores 40.6 per cent. Over time, Southern Asia has increased its parity score for economic representation for senior workers (+9.1 percentage points) and for professional and technical workers (+17.2 percentage points).
     However, the parity score in estimated earned income has dropped by -7.8 percentage points.
     In Educational Attainment, Southern Asia ranks sixth at 95.4 per cent. Economies show high levels of variance in literacy parity: in Nepal and Pakistan, the literacy parity score is below 75 per cent, while full parity is observed in the Maldives.
     The Health and Survival score of Southern Asia is 95.5 per cent. Over time, sparse advances in healthy life expectancy (+0.9 percentage points) are countered by parity losses in the sex ratio at birth (-1 percentage point).
     In Political Empowerment, Southern Asia places fourth with a score of 26.8 per cent. In 2006, the region had the highest baseline (2006) score of all regions, at 21.9 per cent. Since then, it has advanced political parity by 4.9 percentage points – and has been since outstripped by other regions.
     Of the seven economies in the block, only Bangladesh has achieved political parity at the head-of-state level.
     At the parliamentary level, Bhutan and Maldives are the only two economies with parity scores under 5 per cent.
     The report said the global gender gap has closed to 68.8 per cent, marking the strongest annual advancement since the COVID-19 pandemic.
     Yet full parity remains 123 years away at current rates, according to the report.
     Iceland leads the rankings for the 16th year running, followed by Finland, Norway, the United Kingdom and New Zealand.
     The 19th edition of the report, which covers 148 economies, revealed both encouraging momentum and persistent structural barriers facing women worldwide.
     The progress made in this edition was driven primarily by significant strides in political empowerment and economic participation while educational attainment and health and survival maintained near-parity levels above 95 per cent.
     However, despite women representing 41.2 per cent of the global workforce, a stark leadership gap persists with women holding only 28.8 per cent of top leadership positions, the report said.
     "At a time of heightened global economic uncertainty and a low growth outlook combined with technological and demographic change, advancing gender parity represents a key force for economic renewal," said Saadia Zahidi, Managing Director, World Economic Forum.
     "The evidence is clear. Economies that have made decisive progress towards parity are positioning themselves for stronger, more innovative and more resilient economic progress," Zahidi said.

(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)