Pitch Engine
The Times Real Estate

.

Each budget used to have a gender impact statement. We need it back, especially now

  • Written by Rhonda Sharp, Emeritus Professor, UniSA Justice and Society, University of South Australia
Each budget used to have a gender impact statement. We need it back, especially nowJeremy Dorrough/Upshot

COVID-19 has left women, more than men, economically disadvantaged through unemployment, underemployment, lowered incomes, less secure work, greater household and family demands, and increased risk of domestic violence.

But you’re unlikely to read about it in next week’s budget.

Instead you’re likely to read...

Read more: Each budget used to have a gender impact statement. We need it back, especially now

More Articles ...

  1. Going cashless isn't straightforward. Ask Sweden, or Zimbabwe
  2. It's about to become easier to lend irresponsibly, to help the recovery
  3. We're facing an insolvency tsunami. With luck, these changes will avert the worst of it
  4. Top economists back boosts to JobSeeker and social housing over tax cuts in pre-budget poll
  5. Frydenberg is setting his budget ambition dangerously low
  6. Google and Facebook shouldn't subsidise journalism, but the government could
  7. Testamentary trusts are one of the last truly outrageous means of avoiding tax
  8. Keating is right. The Reserve Bank should do more. It needs to aim for more inflation
  9. New Zealand companies lag behind others in their reporting on climate change, and that's a risk to their reputation
  10. It's not only Westpac. What's behind the biggest fine in Australian corporate history
  11. More neurotic, less agreeable, less conscientious: how job insecurity shapes your personality
  12. 'If JobSeeker was cut, the unemployed would be picking fruit'? Why that's not true
  13. Why do bankers behave so badly? They make too much money to ask questions
  14. The major parties' tax promises are more about ideology and psychology than equity or fairness for New Zealanders
  15. Yes government debt is cheap, but that doesn't mean it comes risk-free
  16. Athlete activism or corporate woke washing? Getting it right in the age of Black Lives Matter is a tough game
  17. Vital Signs: 50 years ago Milton Friedman told us greed was good. He was half right
  18. Who suffers most from Melbourne’s extended lockdown? Hint: they are not necessarily particularly vocal 
  19. Super funds are feeling the financial heat from climate change
  20. Tasmania's tax system is broken: here are three ways to fix it
  21. 3 keys to meaningful work: an employer who cares about the environment, society and you
  22. In gold we trust: why bullion is still a safe haven in times of crisis
  23. Are your devices spying on you? Australia's very small step to make the Internet of Things safer
  24. The sackings at Rio look like a victory for shareholders, but...
  25. Corporate dysfunction on Indigenous affairs: Why heads rolled at Rio Tinto
  26. Winding back JobKeeper and JobSeeker will push 740,000 Australians into poverty
  27. Vital Signs: batch testing and contact tracing are the two keys to stop the lockdown yo-yo
  28. Relax, losing access to China won't make us the 'poor white trash of Asia'
  29. With their conservative promises, Labour and National lock in existing unfairness in New Zealand's tax system
  30. Clive Palmer versus (Western) Australia. He could survive a High Court loss if his company is found to be “foreign”
  31. China's leaders are strong and emboldened. It's wrong to see them as weak and insecure
  32. Now we'll need $100-$120 billion. Why the budget has to spend big to avoid scarring
  33. The modelling behind Melbourne's extended city-wide lockdown is problematic
  34. Tracking Victoria's job losses: there's no road to recovery without containing COVID-19
  35. Morrison is right. All governments will need to spend more to get us out of the crisis
  36. Vital Signs: How do you fight a recession without precedent?
  37. Have we just stumbled on the biggest productivity increase of the century?
  38. Six graphs that explain Australia's recession
  39. When it comes to economic reform, the old days really were better. We checked
  40. Is ASIC more concerned about relationships with boards than enforcing the law?
  41. 4 things governments can do to help small business
  42. Recovering water for the environment in the Murray-Darling: farm upgrades increase water prices more than buybacks
  43. Australia's top economists oppose the next increases in compulsory super: new poll
  44. Sexual harassment at work isn't just discrimination. It needs to be treated as a health and safety issue
  45. Vital Signs: No, we won't change the corporate world with divestment and boycotts
  46. Trouble at the mall as landlords and tenants ponder mutually assured destruction
  47. Social licence: the idea AMP should embrace now David Murray has left the building
  48. AMP doesn’t just have a women problem. It has an everyone problem
  49. Algorithms workers can't see are increasingly pulling the management strings
  50. With management resistance overcome, working from home may be here to stay