Department of Global and Intercultural Studies, Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Ezintsha, Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Glob Public Health. 2021 Aug-Sep;16(8-9):1381-1395. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2021.1920044. Epub 2021 Apr 27.
Analysing the pandemic through a feminist political economy lens makes clear how gender, race, and class structures are crucial to the functioning of capitalism and to understanding the impacts of the pandemic. The way capital organises production and reproduction combines with structures of oppression, generating vulnerability among the racialised and gendered populations worst impacted by Covid-19. Using global data, this commentary shows that during the pandemic, women experienced relatively greater employment losses, were more likely to work in essential jobs, and experienced a greater reduction in income. Women were also doing more reproductive labour than men and were more likely to drop out of the labour force because of it. Analyses of capitalism in feminist political economy illustrate how capital accumulation depends on women's oppression in multiple, fundamental ways having to do with their paid and unpaid work. Women's work, and by extension their health, is the foundation upon which both production and social reproduction rely. Recognising the pandemic as endogenous to capitalism heightens the contradiction between a world shaped by the profit motive and the domestic and global requirements of public health.
从女性主义政治经济学的角度分析这场大流行,清楚地表明了性别、种族和阶级结构对资本主义的运作以及理解大流行的影响至关重要。资本组织生产和再生产的方式与压迫结构相结合,使受新冠疫情影响最严重的种族和性别群体变得脆弱。本评论使用全球数据表明,在大流行期间,女性的就业损失相对较大,更有可能从事必要工作,收入减少幅度更大。女性也比男性承担更多的生殖劳动,并且更有可能因此退出劳动力市场。女性主义政治经济学对资本主义的分析说明了资本积累如何以多种基本方式依赖于女性的压迫,这些方式与她们的有酬和无酬工作有关。女性的工作,以及她们的健康,是生产和社会再生产所依赖的基础。将大流行视为资本主义的内在因素,加剧了以利润为动机的世界与公共卫生的国内和全球需求之间的矛盾。