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Nearly half of the workforce under the United Nations Development Program's (UNDP) cash-for-work initiative in Haiti are made up of women, a UNDP official said Thursday.
Within a little over 30,000 Haitians already engaged in the workforce, 40 percent are women, Jordan Ryan, director of the crisis prevention department and development program, said at a press conference at the UN Headquarters in New York.
"Often when they have cash in their pockets, it goes to helping their children and family," Ryan said of the focus on employing women. By engaging women from the very start, it helps in building strong solidarity among Haitians, he said.
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The workers are paid 180 gourges, which comes out to be around $4.47 at current rates of exchange for six hours of labor, Ryan said. Ryan cited that so far, the UNDP's cash-for-work initiative has received about $10 million cash with an additional $7 million pledged. He noted that the program is expected to receive funding from such governments as China, Japan, Norway, Spain, among many.