#WomensDay: One in five say women should stay at home

The Wider Image: Women at work around the world

The Wider Image: Women at work around the world

Published Mar 8, 2017

Share

New York - One in five people around the world believe women are inferior to men and should stay at home, and that men are more capable in the workplace and at school, according to a global survey released on Tuesday.

Nearly all of the 17 550 people surveyed agreed that men and women should have equal rights, but three in four respondents said women still experienced social, political and financial inequality.

Read also:  #Women'sDay: Let women thrive in world of work

“It's encouraging that the vast majority of both men and women around the world believe in equal opportunity but at the same time most still believe that true equality of rights is not here yet,” said Kully Kaur-Ballagan, director at Ipsos MORI that carried out the poll.

Across 24 countries, including Brazil, Canada, Russia, Britain, India and Sweden, more than half of those interviewed by Ipsos MORI called themselves a “feminist”, but a quarter said they were “scared” to speak up for women's rights.

Around half of those polled in China, Russia and India said men were superior to women and better at earning money and at attaining education, according to the survey, which was released to tie in with International Women’s Day today.

UN Women has described the global gender pay gap of 24percent as “the biggest robber” of women. 

REUTERS

Related Topics: