News

Index Finds Little Global Progress on Gender-Based Development Goals

March 11, 2022 1775

An effort to measure how well equality across genders is progressing around the world, using a tool developed around United Nations-developed goals, has detected “little progress” in the last half decade.

The 2022 Sustainable Development and Growth Gender Index finds “little progress on gender equality at the global level between 2015 and 2020.” If current trends continue, the global index’s score will not reach the United Nation’s goals by a 2030 deadline.  

A report on the findings, Back to Normal Is Not Enough, written by Angela Hawke, acknowledges that while the lack of progress is not exactly news, reporting it out does matter. “If we are to reach the vision laid out in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for people and our planet, we must track progress – or the lack of it – with a gender lens across the whole of the 2030 Agenda. 2 And we must use the resulting data to drive accountability for gender equality commitments. The SDG Gender Index is the most comprehensive tool available to do precisely that.” 

The 2022 Gender Index rates a country based on a range of SDGs established by the UN. In the realm of gender equality, these goals include ending discrimination, violence, discrimination, and practices such as child, early and forced marriage and female genital mutilation, while ensuring full access to public services and infrastructure, political and public life, and the full spectrum of gender-specific health care and reproductive rights. The goals also include equal rights to economic resources, enabling technology to promote the empowerment of women, and enforceable legislation for the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls at all levels. 

The rating uses a scale of 0 to 100 points: A very good rating is 90-100, good rating is 80-89, fair rating is 70-79, poor rating is 60-69, and very poor rating is 0-59. Countries were evaluated on use of digital banking, women in parliament, government openness, CO2 emissions, climate vulnerability, and anemia. The top three countries, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, all scored above 90. Five Anglophone countries scored in the ‘good’ category, with Ireland 10th, New Zealand 11th, Australia 14th, the United Kingdom 18th, and Canada 16th. The United States ranked 38th in the world, with a score of 76.6.   

The index is a project of Equal Measures 2030 — an independent and nonprofit sector-led partnership. Organizations involved include the Asia-Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Data2X, the African Women’s Development and Communication Network, ONE Campaign, Plan International, and Women Deliver. The report did not look at events during COVID, but recognizes how the pandemic and its collateral damage hurts girls and women.  

The data the index combed through for the gender index includes government statistics in the UN SDG Database and from household surveys carried out by international agencies. They work closely with the World Health Organization, UN Women, UNICEF, and other to avoid duplication of data analysis. Of the 144 counties surveyed, more than half of the countries made some progress between 2015 and 2020. Sixty-three countries made saw their scores improve one to two points and 28 countries made improvements of three points or more. Benin and Saudi Arabia each saw scores rise by nine points (although still in the ‘very poor’ category), while Armenia rose eight points and is 45th globally. 

Though less than a quarter of countries are increased their score by three points towards gender equality, only a third of countries either did not see their score change or are seeing their score decline. No region improved more than three points in their index score since 2015

The report offers six policy recommendations to meet the 2030 SDG deadline: 

Maxine Terry is a corporate communications specialist with SAGE Publishing. She previously covered judiciary and housing policy as a legislative assistant to U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan.

View all posts by Maxine Terry

Related Articles

Doing the Math on Equal Pay
Insights
November 8, 2024

Doing the Math on Equal Pay

Read Now
Ninth Edition of ‘The Evidence’: Tackling the Gender Pay Gap 
Communication
October 31, 2024

Ninth Edition of ‘The Evidence’: Tackling the Gender Pay Gap 

Read Now
Alondra Nelson Named to U.S. National Science Board
Announcements
October 18, 2024

Alondra Nelson Named to U.S. National Science Board

Read Now
Diving Into OSTP’s ‘Blueprint’ for Using Social and Behavioral Science in Policy
Bookshelf
October 14, 2024

Diving Into OSTP’s ‘Blueprint’ for Using Social and Behavioral Science in Policy

Read Now
Lee Miller: Ethics, photography and ethnography

Lee Miller: Ethics, photography and ethnography

Kate Winslet’s biopic of Lee Miller, the pioneering woman war photographer, raises some interesting questions about the ethics of fieldwork and their […]

Read Now
‘Settler Colonialism’ and the Promised Land

‘Settler Colonialism’ and the Promised Land

The term ‘settler colonialism’ was coined by an Australian historian in the 1960s to describe the occupation of a territory with a […]

Read Now
Eighth Edition of ‘The Evidence’: How Sexist Abuse Undermines Political Representation 

Eighth Edition of ‘The Evidence’: How Sexist Abuse Undermines Political Representation 

In this month’s issue of The Evidence newsletter, Josephine Lethbridge explores rising levels of abuse directed towards women in politics, spotlighting research […]

Read Now
5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments