Ms Gangapriya Chakraverti
Ford Motor Company,India has witnessed a significant rise in women’s enrolment in higher education over the past decade. In several disciplines, women now constitute nearly half—or more—of graduating cohorts. Yet, this educational progress has not translated proportionately into workforce participation, sustained employment, or leadership representation.
A critical but under-recognised constraint in this transition from education to employment is access to safe, affordable, and enabling urban accommodation—particularly for women migrating from Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns and rural areas.
For many first-generation urban migrants, the decision to accept a job offer is shaped not only by salary or role, but by the availability of secure housing, proximity to workplace, affordability of rent, and social support systems. High rental costs, safety concerns, restrictive private accommodation practices, and lack of institutional housing options often deter or delay women’s entry into formal employment. In some cases, these barriers lead to early career discontinuation.
Recognising housing as economic infrastructure—rather than merely a welfare provision—is essential to unlocking India’s women dividend.
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