#Iranian women with college degrees earn just $40 a month
http://women.ncr-iran.org/articles/4148-iranian-women-with-college-degrees-earn-just-40-a-month
Higher
education and employment have always contributed in any country to the
improvement of the younger generations’ life and progress of the society
as a whole.
In
Iran, however, young women are victims of institutionalized
discrimination in employment and education. Such discrimination has
hindered their advancement to the extent that the state-run press write
that women are known as “educated people who work with salaries lower
than the legal minimum wage,” without insurance or official contracts.
According
to an official of the Interior Ministry’s Social Security Organization
Research Institute, 80 percent of uninsured job holders in Iran are
women. (The state-run Khabaronline news agency, November 24, 2016)
While
the poverty line in Iran is more than 3million toumans ($810), young
women with college degrees have to work in unofficial jobs and under
illegal contracts with monthly salaries as low as 150,000 toumans ($40).
Shahindokht
Molaverdi, Rouhani’s deputy in women and family affairs acknowledged in
an interview that the unemployment rate of young women in 2015 had
reached the highest level in 20 years. (The state-run psychnews.ir, January 22, 2017)
The National Statistics Center of Iran declared in summer 2016 that the average unemployment rate for young women in Iran has reached 47.3 per cent last summer.
A
report published by Shahrvand on June 28, 2017, shed light on this
bitter reality in Iran through several interviews. Here are some
excerpts:
Maryam
has a BA in political sciences. She has been working in a Falafel shop
for six months from 3 p.m. until midnight. She earns 150,000 toumans
($40) a month. Maryam says, “My family trusts me otherwise, it is
disgraceful for a young woman in this small town to return home at
midnight.”
Maryam’s
job and salary are not any exception but a routine in Dehdasht and
other cities and towns in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer Ahmad Province. She is
one of 8 million Iranian workers who do not enjoy their minimum rights
under the labor law.
Maryam
says she did not enjoy her minimum rights even before finding this new
job. “I worked as a secretary for two doctors, three years ago. I earned
about the same amount as I do now. Of course, that job was a better and
easier one. I don’t exactly know why I was laid off. I stayed
unemployed for several months and then I came here.”
Shahnaz
is a graduate of computer engineering. She works from 7.30 a.m. until
12.30 p.m. and then from 5 to 8 p.m. at one of the branches of a famous
insurance company.
She
was born and lived in Masjid Soleiman in Khuzistan Province. She earns
300,000 toumans ($80) every month. Shahnaz says, “The situation of young
women’s employment in Masjid Soleiman, Dezful and Shushtar are the
same. In the shop next door, my friend who has a BA in accounting works
from 8.30 a.m. until 2 p.m. and then from 4 to 9 p.m. She earns 200,000
($55) toumans a month.”
Until
a year ago, Gelareh lived in a five-story doctors’ building in
Sanandaj, capital of Kurdistan Province. She says, “I worked as a
secretary up to last July. My contract was not legal and I did not have
any insurance….
“According
to the law, I must have received my unpaid salary and insurance for
these years, but the Department of Labor in Sanandaj does not observe
the minimum wage; they say their standard is what is paid by the job
market and businesses in Sanandaj. The salary of most secretaries is
about the same amount as I earn. I have not received any compensation so
far by filing a complaint.”
Gelareh
says filing a complaint has cost her too much. Despite having three
years of experience in the medical branch, but she can no longer be
employed in this section. Now she is working with her husband in
different shifts of a library.
No comments:
Post a Comment