Housewives’s work will be recognized in new labour code
President Rafael Correa announced during his Saturday broadcast that Ecuadors new Labour Code will recognize household work, carried out in most Ecuadorian families by women, as worthy of salary and benefits.
“Isn’t the housewife who works 16 hours a day at home from Monday to Sunday a worker? Of course she’s a worker. According to international standards, though, housewives are classified as part of an “economically inactive” population: because their criteria for workers is whether someone engages in the market economy,” said President Rafael Correa.
However, Correa didn’t go into detail about exactly how household workers will be remunerated, which has caused speculation.
Geoconda Salcedo, a lawyer, says the change could be useful, in terms of recognizing daily activities that in any area other than the home are considered work. But she says all the clauses in the current labour code are built on the existence of an employer/employee relationship. In the absence of a clear “employer,” when it comes to housework, the new code will have to establish who that employer is to be.
The National Workers Union (UGTE) shares this concern. Nelson Erazo, president of the UGTE, wondered who is going to pay the housewives’ salary.
“Will her spouse be considered in debt if he doesn’t pay his wife’s social insurance fees?” Workers in Ecuador must by law be registered with the IESS, the social security institute which gives its clients access to the public health system and microfinance loans, among other benefits.
Ecuador’s Constitution guarantees in article 34 every person’s right to social security, even those who carry out non-remunerated household work.
Verónica Jimánez, a housewife, believes people like her should be able to be registered with the IESS.
“Though my work isn’t for pay, access to healthcare is my right. It’s a right that many woman should have that so far has been neglected,” she said.
Ejército desarticula campamentos de minería ilegal en Imbabura y golpea economías ilícitas
Ecuador y Colombia retoman diálogo de alto nivel en Lima
Gobierno anuncia cortes de luz en zonas con operativos durante el toque de queda
Así quedaron los grupos de la Copa Libertadores
Plantaciones en Cotopaxi y Pichincha capturan 225 mil toneladas de CO2 al año
Así quedaron los grupos de la Copa Sudamericana
