International Day of Care and Support

Image
Nurachayatun an Indonesian domestic worker from Surabaya Java, prepares food inher employers kitchen after early morning grocery shopping.Photo: UN Women/Staton Winter

International Day of Care

The theme for this year’s International Day of Care and Support (29 October) is, “Transforming Care Systems: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals in the context of Beijing+30”.

Everyone needs care. It is the often invisible and mostly unpaid work that sustains families, communities, and economies.

300 M

Investing in care can potentially create 300 million jobs by 2035

2.5

globally, women and girls spend over 2.5 times more hours per day on unpaid care work than men

2/3

Two-thirds of all workers in the care sector are women

Data source: Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The gender snapshot 2024; Facts and Figures, UN Women

The responsibility of providing care falls overwhelmingly on women and girls, who spend more than twice as many hours as men on unpaid care and domestic work. As a result, they miss out on education, paid work, self-care, and more.

Women also do most of paid care work, but lack basic social security, work long hours for low wages. Two-thirds of all workers in the care sector—including healthcare, childcare, and domestic work—are women.

Investing in care can fuel economies, while reducing women’s poverty and potentially creating 300 million jobs by 2035.

Transforming care systems is an imperative for achieving gender equality and fulfilling the vision of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. It starts with recognizing and valuing care and domestic work, increasing national budgets for equitable and quality public care services, and redistributing unpaid care work.