Report reveals poverty-aggravated labor gaps for Chilean women

A new study based on the 2024 CASEN survey highlights how poverty, caregiving, and informality deepen labor gaps for women in Chile's lowest income quintile. Experts at a Red Activa forum analyzed data showing 27% female unemployment, high informality, and disproportionate care burdens. They proposed nurseries, flexibility, and formalization as key solutions.

At a Red Activa event hosted by La Tercera TV, experts presented the 'Zoom de Género Especial CASEN Pobreza' report, produced by ChileMujeres, OCEC UDP, and the Santiago Chamber of Commerce using 2024 CASEN survey data.

Juan Bravo, OCEC UDP director, noted female labor participation rises with household income, but gender gaps widen in poorer quintiles. "In the lowest quintile, 15.3% of women are out of the labor force due to caregiving, versus 2% in the highest," he said. There, female unemployment hits 27%, 60.4% work informally, and 53.6% part-time at 30 hours weekly.

Francisca Jünemann, ChileMujeres executive president, contrasted: "High-quintile women near 80% participation with low unemployment, but in the first quintile, under 30% have paid work." Osvaldo Larrañaga, from the 2024 Poverty Measurement Expert Commission, linked poverty to employment: the new method raised the figure to 3.5 million people in poverty, nearly two million women, fixing prior overestimations.

María Teresa Vial, Santiago Chamber of Commerce president, stressed informality in commerce and the value of formal first jobs. On education, Bravo and Larrañaga warned of poor quality despite coverage, with nearly 50% functional illiteracy.

Panelists called for universal nurseries, work flexibility, and bureaucracy cuts to formalize jobs. Jünemann noted 1,500 children waiting for public nurseries, hindering hiring of poor women. Amid economic slowdown, they see potential in activating 1.4 million inactive women.

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Illustration of joyful diverse Colombian workers celebrating the unemployment rate drop to 8.8%, featuring job signs, graphs, and national flag.
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Colombia's unemployment rate drops to 8.8% in March 2026

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The Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística (DANE) reported that Colombia's unemployment rate fell to 8.8% in March 2026—the lowest for any March since 2001, continuing the downward trend from 10.9% in January and 9.2% in February—with 2.34 million people unemployed (down 174,000). This marks a 0.8 percentage point drop from 9.6% in March 2025. The employed population grew by 650,000 (2.7%), while the January-March quarter rate stood at 9.6%. Neiva ranked among cities with the lowest unemployment.

Grupo Cibest warned of high labor informality and vulnerable self-employment in Colombia, despite job creation recovery. Dane data showed an unemployment rate of 8.8% in March. The report highlights challenges including 55.6% informality and wage growth without productivity gains.

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Research by Codess and Universidad Externado de Colombia indicates that labor informality spreads between municipalities, while formalization does not produce the same expansive effect.

IMSS data show the average contribution salary hit a record of 663.50 pesos daily in March, up 7.1% nominally. Yet, formal job creation in the first quarter was the weakest in two decades, excluding past crises. This boosts informality and underemployment, analysts say.

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Dane reported that in 2025, 5.2 million people lived in multidimensional poverty conditions, or 9.9% of the national population. This marks a 1.6 percentage point reduction from 2024, with 793,000 people exiting the condition.

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