Unseen, Unpaid, Unsustainable: On the Burden of Invisible Labour on India's Women

For decades, our systems have ignored the invisible labour shouldered by women to sustain homes, families, and wealth producers of the nation. It’s time to stop taking this work for granted

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For decades, our systems have ignored the invisible labour shouldered by women to sustain homes, families, and wealth producers of the nation. It’s time to stop taking this work for granted

The year my daughter was born was also the year the India Art Fair, an event I had built from scratch, began to be recognized as one of the most significant cultural platforms in the country. On the outside, it looked like a moment of triumph: awards, headlines, an ‘empowered woman founder’ at the peak of her professional journey. But behind the scenes, my real days and nights looked very different. I would shuttle between late-night construction reviews at the fairgrounds and a quiet nursing area where I breastfed my baby. I was also the primary caregiver for my mother, who lived with schizophrenia, and the emotional anchor for my younger brother.

In between all of this, I worked non-stop, travelled constantly and tried to meet everyone’s needs and expectations. But there was no time left for myself: not to rest; not to heal; not even to notice what this relentless pace was doing to my body and mind. Such was the lived experience that shaped my founder journey—first with Amaha, a mental-health care organization, and later with the NGO India Mental Health Alliance—and led to mental health becoming not just a professional mission but a deeply personal calling.

It took years for me to understand that the way I was living, and what I was living through, had a name: invisible labour.

Behind Every Economy

Caregiving and managing a home is undeniably the engine that keeps families, communities and economies functioning, but it is also the one form of labour that rarely receives any real recognition or relief. Moreover, studies show that this labour disproportionately falls to one half of the population over the other—women.

Women continue to shoulder the burden of cooking, cleaning, emotional caregiving, maintaining relationships, managing children’s schedules, caring for ageing parents, and holding the family together. They also carry the burden of managing money—o...

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