She even referred to technology that can be used to allow women to work from kitchens and help reduce the gender gap.
"I think it's incredibly important that policies support modern families... We need to start thinking about ways to support the modern workforce and the modern reality in household. I think technology is a great driver," she said.
She was speaking at a session on innovation in workforce development on the second day of the Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) here.
Ivanka, US President Donald Trump's daughter and advisor, suggested that policymakers need to devise ways to support the "modern workforce and the modern reality in household".
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Stating that there is a need to fuel skill training and workforce development, Ivanka said it is necessary to align what is being taught in the classroom with economic realities.
Ivanka, 36, a businesswoman and a fashion designer too, said efforts should be made to get more women into male dominated professions to create an equitable balance in workforce.
"I am incredibly fearful that when we look at where future work is going, if women continue to represent only 13 per cent of engineers in the United States or continue to represent only 24 per cent of computer science professionals, the gender wage gap is actually going to grow in years to come.