Seite - 13 - in options, Band summer 2020
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espite the recent ravages of plague, war,
and pestilence, we humans still excel in
one unceasing task — breeding. So much
so, humanity is on course to squeeze
nearly double the present number of people onto
planet Sardine-Can by 2100. The COVID-19 crisis
alone illustrates the alarming and increasingly
interconnected nature of the challenges facing
systems of government around the world. Putting
systems thinking at the center of policymaking for a
sustainable way forward will be essential in tackling
such obstacles. Research at IIASA is exploring
possible answers. The link between education and
demographic change, for example — particularly
women’s education — is a promising and tantalizing
solution to the question of sustainability. Nor is the
institute alone in this thinking.
The UN identified that making women more
socioeconomically involved in our world and more
self-sufficient could help enormously with our
economic, social, and environmental sustainability.
“Women and girls play a crucial role in the fight
against climate change, and it is essential to make
sure that this role is not only fully understood, but
incorporated into the Sustainable Development
Goals,” says one UN report from 2018.
Several IIASA studies also link the empowerment
and self-efficacy of women to increasing access to
affordable, clean energy, as well as quality education,
and future economic growth.
So many are agreed: it’s time to recalibrate the
gender imbalance for all our sakes. IIASA research
is supporting policymakers by providing the evidence
needed to make the argument that gender issues
have impact. THE POWER OF
EDUCATION
Achieving sustainable outcomes as
per the UN Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) is probably a good start. When
devising strategies for sustainable development
in both developing and developed countries, IIASA
has successfully pinpointed how increasing the
self-efficacy of women, for instance, through
education and workforce participation, will affect
future population dynamics.
One such analysis links education and demographic
change. The authors highlight how lifelong education
strategies that take gender issues into account, starting
from early childhood, can promote productive working
lives and healthy aging.
“In general, what matters for the economic wellbeing
of societies is the proportion of the total population
that earns an income as part of the workforce. Not
all people in the usual working ages 20–65 are,
however, part of the workforce. At the same time
the proportion of people above age 65 is increasing
due to population aging,” explains IIASA researcher
Wolfgang Lutz who has been studying the intersection
of demographics, migration, population, and education.
“Since the workforce participation of women is
still rather low in southern Europe compared to
northern Europe, there is still room for compensating
the increasing number of pensioners through higher
proportions of women participating in the workforce.
The higher the education of the workers, the higher
their productivity, and the higher their contribution
to economic wellbeing.” he adds.
MORE WOMEN IN THE WORKPLACE
Likewise, another team of IIASA researchers has been
researching how migration, workforce participation,
and education can balance the cost of aging in Europe.
The EU had been shaped by population growth,
but now, thanks to longer life expectancy and low
fertility, its population is aging. This new demographic
frontier suggests that the burden on our social
system will be too great to bear.
So how do we avoid overburdening our social
system with population aging? The study agrees that
getting more women into the workforce would be a
good start.
“The higher the
education, the higher
their productivity, and
the higher their
contribution to
economic wellbeing.”
WOLFGANG LUTZ
13Optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
Summer 2020
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band summer 2020"
options
Band summer 2020
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2020
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine