US men who maintain they are doing more housework have a second source to back their claim — a UN report released on Wednesday — although it would be premature to argue that the sexes had reached parity on domestic chores or nearly any other issue.
Housework statistics are perhaps the lightest slice from a welter of numbers in the report, which focused on the global lot of women. The latest in a series of compilations published every five years, the World’s Women 2010 was released this year to mark World Statistics Day. (When the UN wants to draw attention to some issue, it usually gets a day. If it is a particularly intractable problem, it often gets a year.)
Statistics Day is being honored in 100 countries to underscore the need for data as a development tool. (The list of events started with Afghanistan, where Afghan President Hamid Karzai was to participate in a statistical celebration that was presumably not the disqualification of a quarter of the votes from the recent polls.)
Although the 255-page report shows that women have made progress in some areas, like health and education — elementary school enrollment is now the same for boys and girls — they still lag overall.
“Much more needs to be done, in particular the need to close the gender gap in public life and to prevent many forms of violence against women,” said Jomo Kwame Sundaram, the assistant secretary-general who released the report here.
A second hefty report by the UN Population Fund, also released on Wednesday, digs deep into areas where positive news is much harder to find: the harm visited on women.
It suggested that helping women and children recover from the sexual violence and other trauma they suffer in war or natural disasters is a key to moving countries forward on all fronts. Women savagely raped during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina still suffer from limited access to counseling 15 years after the peace treaty, the reported noted.
Among the world’s nearly 7 billion people, men outnumber women by 57 million, with imbalances concentrated mainly in China, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, the statistics report said.
Though obesity has become a national preoccupation in the US, it did not make the chart of 17 countries where more than 20 percent of the women are obese. That roster was led by Qatar with about 45 percent of its women (versus 34 percent of the men). Men and women in Canada are in a dead heat on this score at about 23 percent, whereas, among the most obese countries, only in the Czech Republic do men pull ahead of women — 25 percent versus 22 percent.
On housework, there are wide latitudes on chores — women tend to cook more than men, but men spend time shopping.
Generally in developed nations, women spend close to five hours a day on childcare and domestic chores, whereas men spend two-and-a-half. However, the numbers vary markedly. Women in Italy, Japan, Portugal and Spain among the developed, for example, do three to four times as much domestic work as men.
On education, the statistics have flip-flopped: Women pursuing higher education now dominate, making up 51 percent of college students. That has yet to translate into earning gains: Women earn 70 percent to 90 percent of their male counterparts.
In politics, 14 women were either heads of state or government last year, whereas just 23 countries had what the UN considers critical mass in parliaments, 30 percent. Absolute gender parity for women is not exactly a UN goal. Officials noted, for example, that women worldwide live longer, and they would not want to pull women down even with men.
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