As we head towards the end of the year, many of us will soon be surrounded by our family and friends sitting around dinner tables as we celebrate the festive season. Looking around the table and reflecting on the fact that, on average, every third woman you see will have experienced sexual or physical abuse at some point in their lives.

This violence is not a remote act happening in other people’s homes, it lives all around. It thrives on secrecy, infiltrating homes, communities and workplaces. Yet we are nowhere near an appropriate global response that addresses the scale of this problem. If we are serious about tackling this issue, we cannot continue down the same path or we will rob ourselves and women around the world of the future and life they deserve.

Violence against women and girls is not only one of the most pervasive human rights violations, but it also has significant economic costs. And this is proven. The global economy loses $1.5 trillion every year due to the consequences of violence against women, ranging from money spent in hospitals or on law enforcement through to the income lost when victims miss work.

Experience shows us that these alarming figures tend to rise during crises. We recently witnessed an up to 300 per cent increase in domestic violence in some countries during the pandemic. Encouragingly, many governments and organizations took robust measures to stem the rising tide of violence. But as the pandemic recedes, the attention on ending violence is fading with it. We are sleepwalking back into our old ways and failed practices, which the pandemic has demonstrated as ineffective, exposing too many women to men’s violence.

We know violence can be prevented. Studies show that investing in preventive solutions generates multiple returns, yet the continuing economic cost of violence demonstrates that most of our resources go towards intervening after the abuse has happened rather than preventing it from occurring in the first place.

This is a much more costly approach, particularly at a time when global growth is slowing sharply, which is escalating poverty and hurting public spending on social services. If we resort to business as usual, the cascading effects will expose more women to violence, while shrinking revenues will hinder the capacity of social services to adequately support victims.

Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland (left) speaking at an event on ending violence against women and girls this month, where she said ending this violation is not only morally right but also economically beneficial. Photo by the Commonwealth Secretariat

Recently, we observed the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-based Violence campaign. In 2023, we have an opportunity to commit to a fundamental shift, one that puts the prevention of violence and the inequalities that enable it at the core of our collective efforts. Doing so is both a moral imperative and smart economics. Countries could use the resources saved through prevention to invest in achieving greater gender equality and make a bold step forward to achieving their commitments under the Sustainable Development Goals.

In the Commonwealth, we are working with our 56 member countries to accelerate efforts toward addressing violence against women and girls with a focus on prevention. In particular, we developed a pioneering tool that makes a strong economic case for addressing violence by measuring how a country loses when it does not act to prevent it. The tool helps countries measure the full extent of the issue, analyze the data and provide cost-effective solutions to improve the overall response to ending violence.

The world economy loses $1.5 trillion every year due to the consequences of violence against women, ranging from money spent in hospitals, on law enforcement or income lost when victims miss work, writes @PScotlandCSG #EndVAWG #CommonwealthSaysNOMORE

Recently, our work in Seychelles revealed for the first time that the country loses 4.6 per cent of its gross domestic product to violence against women and girls. It further outlined system-wide responses to tackle violence, including through policies to safeguard victims, improve women’s financial independence and promote non-judgmental front-line services. We have since been supporting Seychelles in implementing multi-agency measures, including a new domestic violence act, designed to prevent and respond to violence.

While violence in itself is enough reason to act, knowing the accompanying economic cost offers a powerful argument to propel governments, businesses and individuals into further action. It demonstrates that when an act of violence occurs, we all lose, and emphasizes that ending it is in everyone’s interest. We urge countries to consider measuring the economic cost of violence as an annual exercise to evaluate the efficacy of their action and build on the findings to strengthen their response to eliminate this violation.

We also need to remember that this is men’s violence, and we need to involve them in the prevention and intervention efforts as active allies. In this regard, we are complementing our policy response with steadfast advocacy. Armed with an array of easy-to-use advocacy resources, our Commonwealth Says NO MORE campaign takes a culturally sensitive, bottom-up approach towards engaging individuals, communities and businesses in raising awareness against gender-based violence, involving grassroots leaders to counter harmful social norms and training bystanders to effectively intervene.

Therefore, any intervention will be in vain if it is not backed up by decisive action from everyone — starting from making our homes safe, to our communities, to our workplaces and to our countries. Now is not a time to sideline this issue. Now, more than ever is a time for a smart, targeted global response that puts out the wildfire of violence against women and girls and sows the seeds of lasting peace for all. And if not now, when?

Baroness Patricia Scotland, KC, born in Dominica, is secretary-general of the Commonwealth of Nations. She is the first woman to hold the post. Previously, she was Her Majesty’s attorney general in the U.K. (the first woman to hold the post) and served as a minister in Tony Blair and Gordon Brown’s governments.

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Speaking of prevention, I'm encouraged to see the fact that MEN and THEIR propensity for violence is at least being mentioned here; it often isn't, paradoxical though that is. It's like it's a given that men's baser instincts simply have to be tolerated because they exist alongside the strength, courage, resourcefulness and competitiveness that got us all here. So these paragons of industry and civilization as we know it are also given more leeway when it comes to their need to dominate, including their sex drive, making the subordination of women a major corollary of the worship and deification of male "gods." This reveals the origins of religion for what they obviously are---some guys' ideas of how to run/rule the world.
They've overshot the mark now and are also being challenged at every turn by women, hence the growing violence against them generally, and the rise of uber-males and/or their old school ideas. For them, religion is the gift that keeps on giving because it's the perfect vehicle for systemic, sanctioned abuse and wherever it's dug in (delusion is never good; mass delusion is the worst), women will never be safe. Look at the Taliban and ISIS where time so chillingly stands still. And look who's overpopulating the world by reducing women to baby machines to shore up the insatiable ego of a certain kind of man.
Everyone everywhere that isn't already "under the influence" and is worried about the survival of our species should be pushing back on religion because we can no longer afford the exclusive male "take."