HealthBody Image The Government Thinks Women Need Sindoor More Than Sanitary Napkins | #ThePadEffect

The Government Thinks Women Need Sindoor More Than Sanitary Napkins | #ThePadEffect

The govt has declared sindoor, bangles and bindis as tax-exempt, however, sanitary napkins are still taxed at 12% under the new GST rules.
Editor’s note: Approx 125kg of sanitary waste is generated per person during their menstruating years and these sanitary napkins can take 500-800 years to break down! #ThePadEffect is a campaign to advocate for sustainable menstruation and prevent thousands of tons of sanitary waste.

As India braces itself to the new Goods and Services Tax (GST) rates that is to be rolled out on July 1, the GST Council declared tax rates for 1211 items on May 18.

Among these were sanitary towels, napkins and tampons. The tax rate on these goods would be 12% (this is the second lowest tax slab, the others being 5%, 18% and 28%).

Superficially, this is an improvement since until now, sanitary napkins, which are considered a luxury item in India, were taxed 14.5%.

For comparison, the government has declared sindoor, bangles and bindis, which have no essential value, as tax-exempt. Also for reference, just some of the other items included in the same category as female hygiene products are drawing books, frozen meat products and cellphones.

The government’s priorities are clear. Marital signifiers like sindoor are clearly adjudged to be more important to a woman’s well-being than essential sanitary products. Because God forbid a woman does not have sindoor to properly display her marital status!

The Government Thinks Women Need Sindoor More Than Sanitary Napkins | #ThePadEffect

Women’s health < everything else. Comic by Tanika Godbole

As the nation’s taxation policies become increasingly centralised with the passage of this act, it is worrying to see that the government doesn’t realise the purpose of sanitary products as an essential product.

India has about 355 million menstruators. Out of these, 70% cannot afford sanitary napkins.

On February 25, Congress MP Sushmita Dev had launched a petition on Change.org urging Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to remove taxation on sanitary products. This received 2,04,518 signatures from all over the country and was even supported by Union Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi, who wrote to Jaitley urging him to provide 100% tax exemption for eco-friendly and bio-degradable sanitary napkins, under GST.

NGO She Says launched a social media campaign under the hashtag #LahuKaLagan (taxation on blood), which received an overwhelming response, with people directly addressing FM Jaitley asking him to waive off the said tax. This movement also saw a lot of support from celebrities, especially popular comedians like Malika Dua, Rohan Joshi, Atul Khatri etc.

India has roughly 355 million people who menstruate. Out of these, a whopping 70% cannot afford sanitary napkins. This in turn affects the participation of girls and women in education and the workforce. The lack of sanitary products and use of unhygienic alternatives increases the risk of reproductive tract infections (RTIs) by 70%. While the disposal of such products is definitely an environmental problem, avoiding the use of sanitary products is also not the solution. There are many individuals and enterprises working on alternative eco-friendly products. Hospital and sanitary waste management is a different issue altogether, which needs to be addressed separately.

Marital signifiers like sindoor are clearly adjudged to be more important to a woman’s well-being than sanitary products.

Many of the currently available brands of sanitary napkin are made out of plastic, which is non bio-degradable. Burning such products creates harmful toxins in the air. Sanitary waste, therefore, should be considered as medical waste, since it also includes blood. One way to dispose them is incineration. As part of the Swachh Bharat campaign, two such incinerators were installed in two hostels in New Delhi. However, the movement failed to spread across the nation.

Feminism in India, along with Eco Femme, Uger Pads, SHE Cup, Boondh, Shomota and Saathi launched #ThePadEffect campaign to address this issue. This movement seeks to create awareness about the harmful effects of sanitary waste on the environment, and also provides information about the various eco-friendly alternatives that are available in the market. This campaign will be culminated on May 28, which is celebrated internationally as Menstrual Hygiene Day.


Featured Image Credit: DNA India

Comments:

  1. Madhavi says:

    I don’t quite agree with this article. While it states that sanitary napkins are essential for women , it says that getting rid of the extra waste is another topic that should be considered separately. Why? If you can’t deal with the mess it creates why create the problem in the first place? Nature didn’t come with sanitary pads and people all along found sustainable solutions that were hygienic. However, now the west introduces sanitary pads and that somehow now is the only hygienic solution to menstruation? Just nonsense

  2. Buffy Slayer says:

    Things that keep women enslaved by patriarchy are tax free, so that the men who pay for it (note that wer are referring to patriarchal set up) will not have to pay more after GST is implemented. Things that increase the freedom of women (physically, mentally, ec.) like sanitary pads are taxed, one might think, to keep women (who cannot afford it) perennially uncomfortable and entrapped in the bedroom, kitchen and nursery. Maybe they expect women to be continuously pregnant (but the napkins will be required after each delivery) busy producing babies (sons) for this patriarchal society. Ulterior motive of GST on napkins may be to encourage women to never have periods 😛

  3. Buffy says:

    @ Madhavi – Why are sanitary napkins not essential for women? Why is waste from sanitary napkins such an issue? This “extra waste” can be managed the same way this country is managing other waste. If it is about not having the consideration to manage women’s “extra waste” then there are many wastes that only men create, why don’t we tax those waste-makers too? Nature didn’t come with electronics and cosmetics (skin whitening, really?!!) and the waste from these are destructive to this plants ecosystem, but these are all “necessities” today. There is no need to drag in the west for every little thing that provides freedom to women and their choice making capacity. It is high time that the patriarchal culture being enforced on women of this country is exterminated!

  4. and condoms and other things call garbhnirodhak is also tax free. that shows our man old thinking.they just want girls and woman stay at home they get married and they get used by men when they want, use of condom tax free. but they cannot do woman safety, and hygiene product tax free, they cannot understand every girl woman need this. not sindur or bangles . girls not need sindur, or bangles or saree. that show we live in a man narrow thinking world.

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