Business Day

Prejudice against women as rife as ever

- Agency Staff New York /AFP

Nearly 90% of the world’s population — of every gender — holds some prejudice against women, according to a UN study.

The UN Developmen­t Programme studied 75 countries representi­ng 80% of the world’s population and found that nine in 10 people — including women — hold such beliefs.

The prejudiced views include that men are better politician­s and business leaders than women; that going to university is more important for men than women; and that men should get preferenti­al treatment in competitiv­e job markets.

The percentage of those holding at least one sexist bias was largest in Pakistan — where 99.81% of people held similar prejudices — followed by Qatar and Nigeria, both at 99.73%.

Countries with the lowest population of those with sexist beliefs were Andorra, at 27.01%, Sweden with 30.01% and the Netherland­s, 39.75%.

France, Britain and the US each came in with similar scores, 56%, 54.6% and 57.31% of people respective­ly holding at least one sexist belief.

The numbers show “new clues to the invisible barriers women face in achieving equality” despite “decades of progress”, the UN Developmen­t Programme said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report.

“The work that has been so effective in ensuring an end to gaps in health or education must now evolve to address something far more challengin­g: a deeply ingrained bias — among both men and women — against genuine equality,” UN administra­tor Achim Steiner said.

Beyond inequaliti­es in education, health and the economy, the statement called out one of the most chilling findings: 28% of people believe it is OK for a man to beat his wife.

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