© OECD 2021
35
The State of Global Education: 18 Months into the Pandemic
Gender
Younger women without
upper secondary attainment
are particularly affected by high unemployment. On
average across OECD countries, the unemployment
rate among women without upper secondary
attainment was 11.9% in 2020, compared to 10.3%
among men. With higher educational attainment levels,
unemployment levels
tend to be not only lower, but
also similar between men and women. On average
across OECD countries, the difference between the
unemployment rates of women and men is
1.6 percentage points
among adults with upper
secondary or post-secondary non-tertiary attainment
and 0.4 percentage point among tertiary educated
adults.
Throughout the pandemic there has been increasing
concern that women would suffer most from job loss,
reversing the progress of recent decades.
Women
are more likely to work part-time, earn less and are
less likely to have stable contractual status. Women
were also more likely to be the primary caregiver to
children when schools closed, resulting in higher risk
of reduction in the number of hours worked. However,
while unemployment increased in 2020 for all adults
compared to 2019,
the impact among men and
women has been very similar on average across
OECD countries. Among adults with below upper
secondary education, the change in the unemployment
rate of women has been within ±1 percentage point
that of men in slightly more than half of OECD and
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