Thank you for inviting me to contribute to this committee's very important study on women's unpaid labour, on behalf of the Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women, CRIAW-ICREF.
CRIAW-ICREF is a national not-for-profit women's organization founded in 1976. We conduct and support feminist research and analysis on women's social and economic situation in Canada, using an intersectional approach in all our work.
Obviously, the issue of women's unpaid labour is not new. Even going back 50 years to the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada, this has been an ongoing issue, raised then and over many decades by feminists in Canada.
Unpaid work takes place in and out of the home and includes all the activities people do to look after each other and manage their household, such as caregiving, looking after children and other family and household members, dependent adults and seniors, and other related domestic work such as cooking, cleaning and laundry.
This unpaid labour continues also out in the community and does not just include women with children. Senior women also provide a significant amount of this unpaid labour as volunteers in their community, as well as assisting others with care, such as the unpaid care of grandchildren, their spouses, partners and friends. We often look at seniors as needing care, but senior women provide a significant amount of unpaid labour. Women by and large provide the bulk of this unpaid labour, which supports the economy and fills the necessary gaps in social services and infrastructure.
The problem is the unequal distribution, intensity, lack of recognition and lack of choice. That is what undermines the rights of women.
Pre-pandemic, in 2015, 25% of women reported caring for children as the main reason for working part time, compared to 3.3% of men. Now, a recent study, which was conducted during the pandemic, found that the average mother in Canada spent 13.5 hours per day on child care in late April and early June 2020. This also includes women who reported being employed full time. Those were the averages, and that was just the child care aspect of unpaid labour.
When you look at the case of single mothers especially during the pandemic, you are looking at 24 hours a day for weeks on end with no other options. It was a heavy load before the pandemic.
The impacts are clear. On one side, this unpaid care work is so intensive that some women remain out of the paid labour force to be at home, while others move in and out of the paid labour force to accommodate this unpaid labour. Many women take jobs that minimize conflict with unpaid responsibilities and work part time. This has long-term impacts for women throughout their lives and has a significant impact on senior women's pensions and financial security.
Women have increased their participation in the paid workforce for decades. Despite this, women continue to provide a disproportionate amount of unpaid labour. There has not been a significant redistribution of this labour.
Women also face significant health challenges related to stress and burnout. For many women, in order to participate in the paid workforce, unpaid labour is done as a second shift, or even a third shift for some women.
For some women, unpaid labour can be offset by paying others to do it, predominantly other women. Black women, immigrant women and other racialized women are overrepresented in the paid sector. They're extremely low-paid jobs and very precarious. Valuing unpaid labour requires evaluation of paid care labour. They are interconnected issues.
There are also very real financial barriers limiting the ability of women to transfer or offset their unpaid labour. It is a false choice for many women, especially women who have low income, to basically contract out this unpaid labour.
It has been well documented that the lack of social infrastructure intensifies women's unpaid labour. In the absence of publicly funded options, these are very real financial barriers for women in paying for this labour, not to mention that in cases where there is insufficient infrastructure, people's lives literally depend on unpaid labour. We see this right now. Many aspects of our social infrastructure are inadequately resourced. For example, many long-term care residents relied on family members to provide supplemental unpaid care labour.
COVID has perhaps shown more clearly how our society as a whole relies on this labour. In fact, it keeps our society afloat. However, while it may be unpaid labour, it comes at a very large cost in the lives of women.
This is not for free. The state needs to shoulder its fair share of this responsibility. This can be remedied by ensuring that there are strong universal public services and that workers, predominantly women, are well compensated.
I'll end there.
Thank you.