Spotlighting Remarkable Women and Girls

Unpaid Care Work: The Economy Women Keep Running for Free

By Tom Boyd

Every day, millions of women wake up and go to work without clocking in.

They cook. They clean. They care for children, elders, relatives, neighbours, and sometimes entire households. They organise lives, manage emotions, and keep families functioning. And when the work is done, there is no paycheck, no pension, no promotion, and often no recognition.

This is unpaid care work. And it is one of the most invisible pillars of the global economy.

According to the International Labour Organization, women perform over three quarters of all unpaid care work worldwide. On average, women spend 3.2 times more hours than men on unpaid domestic and care work every day. In some regions, especially in Africa and Asia, that gap is even wider.

If this labour were paid, its value would be staggering.

Oxfam estimates that unpaid care work contributes over 10 trillion dollars to the global economy each year, which is more than the combined revenues of the world’s largest technology companies. Yet because it happens in homes rather than offices, it is treated as natural, expected, and free.

The consequences are not abstract. They are deeply personal and economic.

Time spent on unpaid care work directly limits women’s ability to earn income, build careers, save money, or invest in education. The World Bank notes that women’s disproportionate care responsibilities are a major driver of lower labour force participation, reduced working hours, and informal or unstable employment.

In simple terms, time is money. And women have less of it.

This imbalance follows women throughout their lives. Young girls are often pulled into caregiving roles early. Adult women juggle paid work with unpaid labour. Older women provide care again, often without support. By retirement age, many women have smaller savings and pensions, not because they worked less, but because their work was never counted.

Unpaid care work also deepens inequality.

Women from low-income households carry heavier care burdens because they cannot outsource help. In many communities, access to childcare, healthcare, clean water, and electricity determines how much unpaid labour women must perform. When systems fail, women fill the gap with their time and bodies.

So why does this continue?

Because unpaid care work is framed as love, duty, or responsibility rather than labour. It is seen as something women are naturally good at, not something that deserves compensation or redistribution. And when work is romanticised, it becomes easier to ignore its cost.

But care does not stop being work just because it is done with love.

So what can change?

Solutions exist, but they require both systemic shifts and personal strategy.

At a policy level, governments must invest in care infrastructure. Affordable childcare, eldercare services, parental leave, and healthcare reduce the unpaid burden placed on women. Countries that invest in care systems consistently see higher female employment and stronger economic growth.

Care work also needs to be measured. When unpaid labour is included in national statistics, it becomes harder to ignore. Data creates visibility, and visibility creates pressure for reform.

Within households, redistribution matters. Conversations about shared responsibility are economic conversations, not just personal ones. When care work is shared more evenly, women gain time, energy, and opportunity.

But while waiting for systems to catch up, women also need ways to protect themselves.

One step is recognising care work as real work. This means factoring it into financial planning. Women who take on significant unpaid care roles should prioritise savings, insurance, and long-term financial security where possible. Care without financial protection is a risk.

Another step is setting boundaries. Not all care has to be silent or endless. Learning to say no, to ask for help, or to negotiate support is not selfish. It is strategic.

Some women also find ways to translate care skills into paid opportunities. Organisation, coordination, emotional intelligence, multitasking, and crisis management are economic skills. They are valuable in leadership, service industries, consulting, education, and entrepreneurship.

Finally, there is power in collective action. When women name unpaid care work and talk about it openly, it becomes harder to dismiss. What is spoken about gains weight.

Unpaid care work has always sustained economies. The question is not whether it is valuable. The question is who pays the cost. Until care is shared, supported, and counted, women will continue to subsidise the world with their time.

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