Covid-19: Holyrood committee calls on government to address ‘gendered’ and ‘intersectional’ issues

Covid-19: Holyrood committee calls on government to address ‘gendered’ and ‘intersectional’ issues

A Holyrood committee has called on the Scottish government to set out how it intends to address the “gendered” impact of the pandemic while also having regard to “intersectional” issues.

As part of the Scottish Parliament’s Equalities and Human Rights Committee pre-budget scrutiny, MSPs heard evidence from a range of organisations on the financial implications of Covid-19 on local authorities and third sector equalities organisations and how health and social inequalities exacerbated by Covid-19 can be addressed in Scotland’s economic recovery.

In a letter to the minister for older people and equalities, Christina McKelvie MSP, the committee called for human rights-based approach to budgeting, with more effective targeting of resources.

Committee convener Ruth Maguire MSP said: “The committee is acutely aware that the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated existing health and social inequalities, increasing the demand on third sector support services and, as the crisis continues, placing increased pressure on public services. We are therefore asking the Scottish government to commit to providing further financial support for the third sector in the longer-term to take pressure away from public services, over and above the emergency funding provided.

“An equality and human rights-based approach to public spending, grounded in high quality evidence and placed at the heart of decision-making, should be the cornerstone of this year’s budget. This would give the committee confidence that already disadvantaged people would not be forgotten, that there would not be unintended consequences, and equalities impacts could be properly addressed.

“We are calling on the Scottish government to clearly set out the specific actions it intends to take in its Economic Implementation Recovery Plan to address the gendered impact of the pandemic, as well as for other protected groups such as disabled, BME and young people. The committee is also seeking assurance that childcare will be treated as an economic issue and that the role of unpaid carers more generally will be translated into actions in the Recovery Plan.”

MSPs acknowledged that the Scottish government had introduced new measures to monitor the impact of spending decisions on sex, race, disability and socio‑economic disadvantage, but heard evidence that Scotland was falling behind compared with international comparators.

The letter states: “The committee very much hopes the new measures put in place by the Scottish government will have the desired impact, however, we recognise we are coming to the end of the parliamentary session and so it will be for another committee to continue to scrutinise whether these measures have worked.

“For this reason, the committee intends in its legacy report to emphasise in the strongest terms to the future committee that if there has not been significant change on mainstreaming, the new committee should consider whether legislating is a viable option to promote change more quickly.”

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