The Star Malaysia - Star2

Don’t call me a housewife

- By SONIA ELKS

HALF of British women find the word housewife outdated, sexist or embarrassi­ng, a survey said on Thursday, as pressure mounts for greater equality at home and at work.

Most women in Britain cannot do old-fashioned tasks, like darning and knitting, and instead see a good career, financial security and being tech-savvy as key accomplish­ments, found a survey by

My Nametags, which manufactur­es iron-on labels.

“There was a strong sense that, although many traditiona­l skills are falling out of favour, these have been replaced with equally important know-hows,” Lars Andersen, managing director of My

Nametags, said in a statement.

Despite sex discrimina­tion being outlawed in the 1970s, few women in Britain hold top positions and salary difference­s have attracted significan­t public attention, with large businesses required to publish pay gap figures this year.

Women earn 18% less than men on average, government data shows.

Although women are making inroads into many highly paid profession­s, jobs like cleaning, catering and childcare - traditiona­lly see nas women’s work - remain undervalue­d and often unpaid, said Samantha Rennie of charitable fund

Rosa. “Parenting, nurturing relationsh­ips and running households are everyone’s responsibi­lities,” Rennie, who finances projects that support women’s equality. “Until it becomes the norm for all genders to take on these roles in equal numremain bers, ‘housewife’ will a ‘dirty word’, rather than just an outdated one.”

More than three-quarters of 2,000 women surveyed said expectatio­ns of their role had changed over a generation. Nearly half said they are more fulfilled than their own mother was.

Another survey this month found that nearly three-quarters of Britons do not believe a woman’s place is in the home although that consensus fell away if she had a young child.

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