Ipsos finds Australians are committed to gender equality but believe it is at the expense of men

Ipsos iris

In line with the global average, 71% of Australians agree there is currently inequality between men and women

A new global study by Ipsos has found that more than half of Australians (51%) believe that things have gone so far in promoting women’s equality that men are being discriminated against.

The study, conducted by Ipsos in collaboration with the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London for International Women’s Day, found more than seven in 10 Australians (71%) agree there is currently inequality between men and women in terms of social, political, and/or economic rights in their country.

Across most measures, Ipsos reported a gap between the views of men and women regarding gender equality.

Australian key findings:

In line with the global average, 71% of Australians agree there is currently inequality between men and women. Women are more likely to agree than men (79% vs. 63%)
Half of Australians (50%) believe equality between men and women will be achieved in their lifetime however this is significantly lower than the global average (55%).
Three in five Australians (64%) believe that women won’t achieve equality in their country unless men take action to support women’s rights. Again, women are more likely to agree than men (70% vs. 57%).This has reverted to pre-COVID levels (2019: 63%) after a high of 73% in 2022.
Significantly below the global average, Australians are less likely to agree that things have gone far enough in their country when it comes to giving women equal rights with men (43% Australia vs. 54% global). This belief has increased by 8 points since last year (2022: 35%) and 11 points since pre-COVID(2019: 32%).
Australian women are more likely to agree that gender equality is good for both genders (64% of women vs. 48% of men), whereas Australian men are more likely to agree that gender equality mainly benefits women (29% of men vs. 14% of women).
One in three Australians (33%) report having witnessed at least one of several forms of gender discrimination in the past year.
In Australia 43% (54% globally) say that when it comes to giving women equal rights with men, things have gone far enough.
There are concerns about the impact of equality on men:
o 43% of Australians (54% globally) agree that men are expected to do too much to support equality. Globally and in Australia, this has increased since 2019 and men are much more likely than women to agree with this statement.
o More than half of Australians (51%) (48% globally) agree that things have gone so far in promoting women’s equality that men are being discriminated against. There is much higher agreement among men: in Australia, the gap is 20 points – 60% of men agree versus only 41% of women.
While 59% of Australians(62% globally) agree there are actions they can take to help promote equality, Australians are less likely to report they have taken at least one action in the past year (52% vs 62% global average). However, there is also evidence of barriers, with 3 in 10 in Australia (and 37% globally) feeling scared to speak out for women’s rights because of what might happen to them, increasing since 2017.

Nonie Finlayson, Ipsos Australia Public Affairs senior research manager, said: “The findings from this Ipsos research suggest that gender equality still has a way to go. We are seeing an increasing concern globally and in Australia about the impact of equality on men.
 
“There is also a large gender gap, particularly around the belief that men are being discriminated against and this, coupled with the growing fear around speaking out, will be the challenge moving forward for achieving equality. Both here in Australia and globally, we see strong agreement that men are needed to achieve equality.”

The global view

Looking at respondents across all generations globally, the majority agree that inequality between men and women persists, and that improvements will require efforts from both men and women.
 
A global country average of 68% agree there is currently inequality between men and women in terms of social, political, and/or economic rights in their country (looking at the trend since 2017 across a sub-sample of 22 countries, the proportion who believe inequality exists has fallen by 5 points since then).
 
There is a similar level of agreement that women won’t achieve equality in their country unless men take action to support women’s rights (64% global country average), and that there are actions people can personally take to help promote equality between men and women (62%).

Just over half (55%) believe equality between men and women will be achieved in their lifetime – across the 25 countries who took part in 2018 and 2023, optimism that equality will be achieved is 5 points higher than before the COVID pandemic.
 
In line with this, people around the world tend to believe young people will have a better life than their parents’ generation – although a larger proportion feel optimistic about the future of young women (51% global country average) than for young men (42%).

When asked whether gender equality mainly benefits women, mainly benefits men, or is good for both men and women, half (53%) say it is good for both genders, with a further 1 in 5 (18%) saying it mainly benefits women. Men are more likely than women to agree that gender equality mainly benefits women (22% of men compared to 13% of women). Only 8% say that gender equality mainly benefits men.

Despite this, a majority (54% global country average) also agree that when it comes to giving women equal rights with men, things have gone far enough in their country – an identical proportion (54%) say that men are expected to do too much to support equality.
 
Indeed, 48% agree that we have gone so far in promoting women’s equality that we’re discriminating against men. And there are signs that these views are held more widely now than before the COVIDpandemic. On average across 25 countries, the proportion of people who think men are being expected to do too much to support equality has risen by 9 points from 43% to 52% between 2019 and 2023.
 
At the same time, there has been a 7-point rise in the belief that things have gone far enough when it comes to giving women equal rights, from 42% to 49%.

Day-to-day incidents of sexism persist, but most say they’re able to take action – despite increasing belief that there’s risk in doing so

Four in ten (43% global country average) report having witnessed at least one of several forms of gender discrimination in the past year, with the most common being hearing a friend or family member make a sexist comment (27%), followed by seeing examples of gender discrimination at work (20%), and seeing someone sexually harass a woman (14%).

Three in five (59%) say they’ve taken at least one action to promote gender equality in the past year. The most common actions taken include talking about gender equality with family or friends (32%), speaking up when a friend or family member made a sexist comment (21%), and talking about gender equality at work (21%). More than one in three (37%) said they have taken no action in the past year.

However, there is also evidence of the barriers that are preventing people from taking action to support gender inequality. More than one in three (global country average of 37%) say they are scared to speak out and advocate the equal rights of women because of what might happen to them. This too has increased over the last six years: between 2017 and 2023, the average proportion across 22 countries feeling scared to speak out has risen from 24% to 33%.

When asked directly, respondents also named other barriers: feeling that there’s nothing people can do that will really make a difference (13%), not knowing how to talk about gender equality/what next steps should be taken (11%), feeling that it’s irrelevant/unimportant (10%), and feeling concerned about being physically abused or threatened (10%).
 
More positively, the least commonly selected responses were that it’s only a women’s issue (asked of men only; 6%), that people don’t think gender equality exists (6%), and that they don’t want to promote it (5%).

Younger generations are more optimistic about the future than older age groups, but they are also more cautious about the risk of speaking out and are more concerned that gender equality negatively impacts men

On average across all 32 countries surveyed, Gen Z (45%) and Millennials (44%) are more likely to identify as feminists, compared to 37% of Gen X and 36% of Baby Boomers. Furthermore, 2 in 3 Gen Z (65%) and Millennials (65%) agree there are actions they can take to promote equality between men and women, as do 61% of Gen X, but falling to 52% of Baby Boomers.

Similarly, younger generations are more likely to agree that gender equality will be achieved in their lifetime (60% of Gen Z and 61% of Millennials, vs 53% of Gen X and 44% of Baby Boomers). Gen Z are also the most likely to have taken at least one of the listed actions in support of gender equality in the past year (68%), and this falls steadily with each generation, with Baby Boomers the least likely to have taken action (41%).

This optimism comes despite a larger share of Gen Z (48%) and Millennials (43%) saying they’re scared to speak out for women’s equal rights because of what might happen to them, a fear shared by one in three Gen Xers (32%) and only one in four Baby Boomers (23%).
 
The younger generations are also more likely to say they’ve seen at least one form of discrimination mentioned in the survey (58% Gen Z and 49% Millennials compared with 36% Gen X and 26% of Baby Boomers).

At the same time, about half of Gen Z (52%) and Millennials (53%) agree that things have gone so far in promoting women’s equality that men are being discriminated against, falling to 46% of Gen X and 40% of Baby Boomers.
 
Younger generations are also the most likely to agree that a man who stays home to look after his children is less of a man, with 30% each of Gen Z and Millennials agreeing with this statement compared to 22% of Gen X and just 14% of Baby Boomers.

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