Abstract
South Africa has been exposed to climate change and has been experiencing associated
extreme climatic events such as droughts, floods, and heat waves. These have impacted water and
fuel sources, habitats, human health, and economic productivity. Poorer populations and particularly
females are more affected. The main objective of this study is therefore to assess gender inequalities
in employment resultant from the effects of climate change and extreme climatic events. The study
employs binary, ordered, and multinomial logistic models to analyse the effects on employment,
intensity of employment and the effects in economic sectors, respectively. The study computes
temperature deviations from its long-run mean as climate change variable and uses the Keetch–
Byram Drought Index and number of heatwave days per year as proxies for extreme climatic events.
Data for the work are from the South AfricanWeather Services database and the National Income
Dynamic Survey. The findings suggest that climate change reduces the probability of being employed
more for males than females, but extreme events have more negative effects on female employment
than males. We suggest that while climate change mitigations and adaptation measures geared
towards the labour market should take priority in general, when extreme climate events occur, labour
market support measures should weigh more towards females