Each budget used to have a gender impact statement. We need it back, especially now - 0 views
-
Simon Knight on 29 Sep 20Until the first Abbott-Hockey budget in 2014, a statement of budget measures that disproportionately affect women was published at budget time. At times given different names, the first was delivered with the Hawke government's 1984 budget. In its foreword, then Prime Minister Hawke promised that "within the overall economic objectives of the government" important budget decisions would from then on be made "with full knowledge of their impact on women". These women's budget statements shed light on the impact of decisions that might have been thought to have little to do with gender, such as the Hawke government's reduction of tariffs on imports of clothing, textiles and footwear. The statement pointed out that two-thirds of the workers in these industries were women and that without special support for retraining (which was given) they would be disproportionately disadvantaged. Increasingly, and especially during the Rudd and Gillard governments, the statements made visible the economic impact of women's greater responsibility for unpaid care work.