Pakistan’s growing number of educated women is not translating into equal participation in the workforce, as cultural expectations, family pressures, and psychological barriers continue to restrict their professional mobility. Despite two decades of rising female university enrolment and in many cities, women outnumbering men in classrooms only a small share manage to start or sustain careers.
Families, workplace discrimination, and social scrutiny often prevent women from stepping into the professional world. The biggest barrier comes from the quiet yet powerful fear of “log kya kahenge” (what will people say), forcing many young women to choose societal approval over personal ambition.
Psychological Pressures Shape Ambition
Girls are encouraged to study but rarely supported when they aspire to full-time careers. Modesty and obedience are valued more than independence, creating emotional conflict. Many young women feel guilty for wanting success, while others are told ambition makes them “less feminine,” slowly weakening their confidence and limiting their choices.
Urban Shift: The ‘Biological Clock’ Fear
In cities, the conversation has changed from “Should she study?” to “Will she still have time to marry?” Families often warn daughters that focusing too much on work may delay marriage or motherhood. In some homes, permission to work is tied to getting engaged first. The authority to decide once in parents’ hands often shifts to husbands after marriage, keeping even educated women bound by invisible rules.
Activist Nighat Said Khan highlights this contradiction: women are educated, yet their education is still treated as preparation for marriage, not independence.
Rural vs Urban Reality: Different Settings, Same Struggle
Urban women face glass ceilings, harassment, and rigid work environments. Rural women face even heavier barriers transport, safety issues, and deeply rooted traditions. Those who move to cities experience culture shock and emotional stress as they balance family expectations with unfamiliar workplaces.
Workplaces Still Not Built for Women
Many organisations lack basic gender-friendly policies. Issues like harassment, unequal pay, missing childcare support, and lack of flexibility push women out of workplaces. When women leave, it is not only a personal setback but also a loss of national talent, as half the population’s potential remains underused.
A Path Forward: Confidence, Support, and Inclusion
Real change demands family support, gender-sensitive workplaces, and deeper educational guidance. Families must view a woman’s independence as strength, not rebellion. Schools should build confidence, while employers must ensure safe, flexible, and inclusive environments.
Most importantly, women need the freedom to redefine ambition on their own terms understanding that building a career does not challenge culture but enriches it through leadership, contribution, and dignity.
