Beliefs about attitudes and roles of men and women regarding unpaid childcare and housework, by household type eige_gap_attit__ggs_attit_hh

Time format:
Years
Unit:
Percentage (comparable)
Description:

This dataset shows respondents’ views about attitudes and roles of women and men regarding unpaid childcare and housework.

The numbers indicate what percentage (%) of all respondents have expressed each level of agreement (on a five-point scale, from ‘strongly disagree’ to ‘strongly agree’) with each of the following statements:

  • A working mother can establish just as warm and secure a relationship with her children as a mother who does not work.
  • Boys have the same obligations to help with household chores as girls.
  • If the child is ill, the father should also go on sick leave.
  • A family is stronger when fathers not only support the family financially, but also take care of children.
  • Mothers should make most of the decisions on how to bring up their children.
  • Household work should be shared by partners equally.

This indicator is disaggregated by household type. For the purposes of this indicator, five household types are distinguished:

  • Single without children
  • Lone parents or single cohabiting with children
  • In a couple without children
  • In a couple cohabitating with children
  • Other

More information on the methodological aspects of EIGE’s “survey on gender gaps in unpaid care, individual and social activities (CARE)”.can be obtained in the technical report.

MT
LV
LU
NL
CZ
EE
SK
LT
BE
BG
EL
CY
IE
SI
DK
FR
PT
EU27_2020
HU
ES
DE
AT
IT
FI
RO
PL
HR
SE
2022
MT
25.8
LV
31.8
LU
35(y)
NL
37
CZ
37.4
EE
40.1
SK
40.5
LT
41.7
BE
43.6
BG
48.1
EL
49.3
CY
49.9
IE
53.8
SI
54.2
DK
54.9
FR
55.9
PT
56
EU27_2020
56.2
HU
56.8
ES
57.5
DE
58
AT
58.7
IT
59.8
FI
60
RO
61.3
PL
62.6
HR
63.6
SE
64.6

Available flags:

b break in time series c confidential
d definition differs, see metadata e estimated
f forecast i see metadata
m imputed n not significant
p provisional r revised
s Eurostat estimate u low reliability
x dropped due to insufficient sample size y unreliable due to small sample size
z not applicable