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Stop paying more for being a woman

Basics

  • Definition: Pink Tax is not an actual government tax but a pricing phenomenon where products and services targeted at women cost more than those for men.
  • Origin: Term believed to have originated in California, 1994.
  • Global Example: US studies show women’s personal care products are ~13% costlier than men’s.

Relevance : GS-II (Womens Rights, Gender Justice, Consumer Protection), GS-III (Economic Empowerment of Women).

Why in News

  • Growing awareness in India after the 2018 GST exemption on sanitary napkins/tampons.
  • Recent discussions highlight how gender-based pricing affects household savings and women’s economic participation.

Overview

  • Polity/Legal
    • No dedicated Indian law against Pink Tax.
    • NCDRC ruling: Companies must follow fair pricing, avoid gender-based discrimination.
    • Relates to CEDAW (Convention on Elimination of Discrimination Against Women) commitments.
  • Governance/Administrative
    • Lack of regulatory guidelines on gender-neutral pricing.
    • Need for Consumer Protection Authorities to take proactive role.
  • Economy
    • Increases cost of living for women despite gender wage gap (India’s women earn ~20–30% less on average).
    • Reduces disposable income, impacting savings and consumption patterns.
  • Society
    • Reinforces stereotypes via “pink packaging” and gendered marketing.
    • Burdens households where women are non-earning members.
  • International
    • US & UK: Studies confirm systemic higher costs for women’s products (deodorants, clothing, dry cleaning).
    • UN (2017): Called on states to end gender-based price discrimination.

Challenges

  • Low awareness: ~67% of Indians have never heard of Pink Tax (IFSA study).
  • Cultural acceptance of gendered marketing.
  • Weak regulatory monitoring.
  • Lack of affordable gender-neutral alternatives.

Way Forward

  • Legal/Policy:
    • Draft gender-neutral pricing guidelines under Consumer Protection Act.
    • Consider anti-discrimination provisions under Competition law.
  • Awareness: Consumer education on comparing unit costs, demanding fair pricing.
  • Market Solutions: Promote gender-neutral brands and unisex services (salons, clothing).
  • Global Best Practices:
    • Some US states banned gender-based pricing in services.
    • EU consumer advocacy campaigns for transparency.

Conclusion

The Pink Tax highlights a subtle but systemic form of gender inequality in markets. India needs a mix of legal safeguards, consumer awareness, and industry responsibility to ensure fair pricing and protect women’s economic rights.


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