Half of Maltese women not going to work

51% of women aged 25-54 in Malta do not participate in labour market.

Corrected at 12:12pm with reference to family duties

Malta is topping the EU’s inactivity rate because over half the women of prime working-age (25-54) are not employed according to data issued by Eurostat.

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51.1% of Maltese women are not active, along with 87% of women aged 55-65, confirming a worrying trend of women who choose not to take up gainful employment for various reasons. 40% of women aged 25-54 said they could not work due to family duties.

In the EU27 in 2009, the inactivity rate of women aged between 25 and 54 years was 22.1%, compared with 8.2% for men. Among the Member States, the lowest inactivity rates for women aged 25-54 were found in Slovenia (12.1%), Sweden (12.9%) and Denmark (13.0%), while Malta (51.1%), Italy (35.5%), Romania (29.4%) and Greece (29.0%) had the highest.

In spite of the economic crisis, the labour market participation of women in the EU27 continued to increase between 2008 and 2009, as the inactivity rate of women aged 15-64 further declined from 36.1% to 35.7%. For the participation of men however a limited impact can be observed, as the rate for men aged 15 to 64 increased, even if slightly, for the first time since 2002, from 22.0% in 2008 to 22.2% in 2009. Most affected seemed to be young men aged 15 to 24, who saw their inactivity rate rise from 52.1% in 2008 to 53.0% in 2009.

The period between the ages of 25 and 54 is the main working age, and also the age when families are started and children are raised. The main single reason for prime working aged women to be outside the labour market is therefore family responsibilities.

Among prime working aged women in the EU27 in 2009, 10.1% stated they were outside the labour market due to family responsibilities, almost half of all women of this age outside the labour market. The percentage mentioning family responsibilities varied greatly between Member States: Denmark (1.4%) had the lowest rate, followed by Sweden (1.8%) and Slovenia (3.6%).

At the other end of the scale, Malta (40.4%) had by far the highest rate, followed by Greece (16.2%) and Luxembourg (15.6%).

Education and retirement explain the higher inactivity rates observed for the younger and older population. For women aged 15-24, the inactivity rate was 59.3% in the EU27, compared with 53.0% for men. Female inactivity rates within this age group were lowest in the Netherlands (28.1%) and Denmark (29.3%), and highest in Hungary (78.5%) and Italy (76.1%). National differences in the behaviour of students having or seeking a job largely explain those differences.

For women aged 55-64, the inactivity rate was 60.1% in the EU27 in 2009, compared with 41.5% for men. The lowest female inactivity rates were recorded in Sweden (30.1%) and Estonia (33.9%), and the highest in Malta (87.9%) and Poland (76.8%).

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Well if you consider working 6am - midnight straight, 7 days a week, 52 days a year as being inactive than this article is right. I was employed for several years, but I can assure you that being a full time mum and homemaker does not qualify a woman as being un-productive. Besides non-employed women do jobs that are not valued economically... who gives little ones a sense of nurturing, or who does a teen find at home after school when he needs to talk it out, who do elderly parents depend on, or a person with special needs... who is there to volunteer? It is not all about money and it is a pity that our society only values a person upon their employablility or upon their earnings. There are priorities in life and in this day and age I am of the firm opinion that we have everything mixed up.
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Michael Gauci
Childbearing,Cooking, Cleaning and looking after the house is enough for any woman. We should not be cruel and make them work outside the home, we must be kind,considerate and passionate about this. Keep them home.