Opinion: The cost of being a Sri Lankan woman
By Nishtha Chadha
This year’s International Women’s Day theme is #EachforEqual – a concept grounded in the idea of ‘Collective Individualism’. Collective Individualism is the idea that each of us is part of one whole. Our individual actions, conversations, behaviours and mindsets go beyond the confines of our individual lives, and can have a significant impact on our larger society. Collectively, we have the capacity to create a gender equal world.
Gender equality in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka still has a significant way to go when it comes to gender equality. The Global Gender Gap Report 2020 ranks Sri Lanka 102 out of 153 countries in the gender equality index. Women’s economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment and political empowerment are major areas of concern, and only seem to be getting worse.
| General Duty | VAT | PAL | NBT | CESS | Total |
| 30% | 15% | 7.5% | 2% | 30% or Rs.300/kg | 101.2% |
The average woman has her period for around 5 days and will use 4 pads a day. Under the previous taxation scheme, this would cost her LKR 520 a month. The estimated average monthly household income of the households in the poorest 20% in Sri Lanka is LKR 14,84. To these households, the monthly cost of menstrual hygiene products would therefore make up 3.5% of their expenses. In comparison, the percentage of expenditure of this income category on clothing is around 4.4%.
The impact of unaffordability
The high cost of menstrual hygiene products in Sri Lanka has direct implications on girls’ education, health and employment.
According to a 2015 analysis of 720 adolescent girls and 282 female teachers in Kalutara district, 60% of parents refuse to send their girls to school during periods of menstruation. Moreover, in a survey of adolescent Sri Lankan girls, slightly more than a third claimed to miss school because of menstruation. When asked to explain why, 68% to 81% cited pain and physical discomfort and 23% to 40% cited fear of staining clothes.
Inaccessibility of menstrual hygiene products also results in the
use of makeshift, unhygienic replacements, which have direct implications on
menstrual hygiene management (MHM). Poor MHM can result in serious reproductive
tract infections. A study on cervical cancer risk factors in India, has found a
direct link between the use of cloth during menstruation (a common substitute
for sanitary napkins) and the development of cervical cancer[19];
the second-most common type of cancer among Sri Lankan women today.
The unaffordability of menstrual hygiene products is proven to have direct consequences on women’s participation in the labor force. A study on apparel sector workers in Bangladesh found that providing subsidized menstrual hygiene products resulted in a drop in absenteeism of female workers and an increase in overall productivity.
Slashing taxes for gender
equality
Internationally, repeals on menstrual hygiene product taxation are becoming increasingly common due to their proliferation of gender inequality and the resulting unaffordability of essential care items, commonly known as ‘period poverty’. Kenya was the first country to abolish sales tax for menstrual products in 2004 and countries including Australia, Canada, India, Ireland and Malaysia have all followed suit in recent years.
If Sri Lankans are serious about creating an equal platform for
women and girls to achieve their full potential, ‘Collective Individualism’ is
certainly the key. Gender equality can no longer be just a ‘women’s issue’.
It’s an ‘everyone issue’. Each and every Sri Lankan has a responsibility to demand
real action from their policymakers, to promote gender-sensitive policies and
abolish taxes like this, which actively limit a woman’s ability to achieve her
full potential.
By reducing the rates of taxation, the cost of importing sanitary napkins and tampons will simultaneously decrease and stimulate competition in the industry, further driving prices down and encouraging innovation. The conventional argument in favour of import tariffs is the protection of the local industry. However, in Sri Lanka, sanitary napkin exports only contribute a mere Rs. 25.16 million, or 0.001%, to total exports.
Increased market competition would also incentivise local
manufacturers to innovate better quality products and ensure their prices
remain competitive for consumers. Other common concerns pertaining to the issue
of low quality products potentially flooding the Sri Lankan market if taxation
is reduced are unlikely to materialise, since quality standards are already
imposed by the Sri Lankan government on imported products under SLS 111.
If menstrual hygiene products are made more affordable it is likely
that more Sri Lankan women will be able to uptake their use, allowing them to
attend more school days, work more consistently and, by extension, access more
opportunities. Moreover, with more products entering the market, women will
have expanded consumer agency, allowing them to purchase products that address
their specific needs without being economically burdened for it. This would
remove a significant barrier to women’s empowerment and create a wide-scale
positive impact on closing Sri Lanka’s present gender gap.
Gender equality can only be achieved when we begin dismantling the
structures that disadvantage our most vulnerable counterparts. Abolishing Sri
Lanka’s menstrual tax may just be one small step towards achieving this. The
Advocata Institute has launched an online campaign titled ‘the costs of being a
woman’, which highlights taxes that disproportionately affect women. With every
discriminatory tax and policy that is abolished, the collective impact could be
transformative.
That is what #EachforEqual is about – sharing the responsibility to
create a more equal world for each and every one of us.
Nishtha
Chadha worked at the Advocata Institute as a Research Intern, and can be
contacted at nishthachadha0@gmail.com. Learn more about Advocata’s work at www.advocata.org. The opinions expressed are the author’s own views. They may not
necessarily reflect the views of the Advocata Institute, or anyone affiliated
with the institute. [1]“Global Gender Gap Report 2020”.
World Economic Forum, 2020, http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_GGGR_2020.pdf Accessed 9th March 2020
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Ibid.
[7] “Reducing Gender Gap Boosts Sri Lankan Economy, Says World bank Vice
President for South Asian Region “. World
Bank, 2019 https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2019/02/15/reducing-gender-gap-boosts-sri-lankan-economyAccessed 9th march 2020
[8] World
Bank. 2017. Getting to work : unlocking
women’s potential in Sri Lanka’s labor force (English). Washington, D.C. :
World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/477691510659826789/Getting-to-work-unlocking-womens-potential-in-Sri-Lankas-labor-force
Accessed 9th March 2020
[9] “HS Code Finder / Sri Lanka Customs”. Customs.Gov.Lk, 2020, http://www.customs.gov.lk/business/hsfinder.
Accessed 04 March 2020.
[10] Sri Lanka Customs. Tariff Guide
2019.03.15. Chapter 1: Section (6).
http://www.customs.gov.lk/tariffchanges/home. Accessed 14 Oct 2019.
“General duty = CIF value* customs duty rate
PAL (Port and Airport Development Levy) = CIF value *
PAL rate
CESS levy = (value of the good +1 0%*value of the good)
* CESS rate
Excise (Special provisions) duty = (value of the good +
15% of the value of the good + General Duty + CESS levy + PAL levy ) * Excise duty rate
Value Added Tax = value of the good + (1+10% of the
value of the good + General Duty + PAL levy + CESS levy + excise duty) * VAT rate
Nation Building Tax = value of the good + 10% of the
value of the good + General Duty + PAL levy + CESS levy + Excise duty) * NBT
rate”
[11] “Sri Lanka Lifts Tax On Sanitary Napkins”. Economy Next, 2018, https://economynext.com/Sri_Lanka_lifts_tax_on_sanitary_napkins-3-11961.html.
Accessed 11 June 2019.
[12] “A Woman’s Monthly Tax — Advocata
Institute | Sri Lanka | Independent Policy Think Tank”. Advocata Institute | Sri Lanka | Independent
Policy Think Tank, 2018, https://www.advocata.org/commentary-archives/2018/06/12/a-womans-monthly-tax.
Accessed 12 Oct 2019.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Household Income and
Expenditure Survey 2016. http://www.statistics.gov.lk/HIES/HIES2016/HIES2016_FinalReport.pdf. Accessed 12 Oct 2019.
[15] Ibid.
[16] “Menstrual Hygiene Management In Schools In South Asia”. Wash Matters, 2018, https://washmatters.wateraid.org/sites/g/files/jkxoof256/files/WA_MHM_SNAPSHOT_SRILANKA.pdf .
Accessed 11 June 2019.
[17] Ibid.
[18] Ibid.
[19] Socio-demographic and behavioural risk
factors for cervical cancer and knowledge, attitude and practice in rural and
urban areas of North Bengal, India. Raychaudhuri S1, Mandal S. http://journal.waocp.org/article_26298_e73d70143926839642144a3724161d93.pdf.
Accessed 12 Oct 2019.
[20] Hossain, Md Irfan, et al. “Evaluation of the
Effectiveness of the HERhealth Model for Improving Sexual and Reproductive
Health and Rights Knowledge and Access of Female Garment Factory Workers in
Bangladesh.” (2017).
[21]“Period Poverty:
Everything You Need to Know”. Global Citizen, 2019. https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/period-poverty-everything-you-need-to-know. Accessed 29 October 2019.
[22] “Goodbye, Tampon Tax (at Least for Some)”.
New York Times, 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/09/health/tampons-tax-periods-women.html. Accessed 29 October 2019.
[23] Export Development Board Statistics, Export Database. (2018).
