Female participation in the labour market is lower than for men, in spite of the fact that the share of highly educated women can be up to 10 percentage points higher in certain regions in Greece, Italy, Poland and Turkey.
Female participation in the labour market has increased in OECD countries over the past decades, the overall rate exceeding 62% in 2017. However, important differences in the access to labour markets for women are still present. Across countries, the gender gap in employment rates is on average 15 percentage points (7 percentage points lower than in 2000). While at the turn of the millennium the gender gap in the employment rate was higher than 20 percentage points in many regions from 15 countries, in 2017 this occurred only in some regions from four countries. However, in 28% of OECD regions, less than half of working age women was employed in 2017, suggesting that services that allow reconciling family and work life, as well as incentives for labour market participation are quite diverse both within and across countries. Regional discrepancies between male and female employment were largest in Mexico, Chile, Turkey, Israel, Italy and the United States, with a more than 15 percentage point difference between the regions with the smallest and highest gender gap. This gender gap can be higher than 30 percentage points in regions in Mexico and Turkey, with extreme values being found in Chiapas and Central Anatolia Western South, respectively ( 3.25).