<Anchor> The



presidential candidates of the ruling and opposition parties pulled out the reorganization card of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family side by side.



The policy stance of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family is to change from women's human rights to gender equality, but reporter Lee Kyung-won actually examined the current policy of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family.



<Reporter>



[Lee Jae-myung / Democratic Party presidential candidate (last 12th): How about going to the Ministry of Equality and Family rather than the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family in terms of aiming for a society where both men and women are equal... .]



[Yunseokyeol / the national forces candidates (month 21): to realize the substantial equality of the sexes and reorganized the Ministry of Gender Equality in Gender Equality and Family Affairs, will re-work and budgets]



yeogabu so unbiased in particular gender The promise of the two candidates is to revamp the organization.



To understand the policy direction, we need to look at the budget first.



In fact, as a result of the team's analysis, the budget for next year's leisure ministry is about 1.4 trillion won, or 0.23% of the total budget.



It was the smallest among the 18 departments.



Support for single-parent families was the most at 430 billion won, followed by child care support and youth safety net construction.



Let's look at something else.



There are a lot of letters, but let's focus on keywords.



Family, youth, these words are especially common.



As for women, support for women's economic activities stands out.



It is to help women who have lost their careers find employment again, and the purpose is to ease the burden on the household with income.



In terms of recovery from domestic and sexual violence victims and the fact that not only the victims but their families are suffering, the benefits spread to the entire family.



In fact, the team also classified budgets by policy based on the National Assembly data, and most of them were allocated to family and youth policies, with women accounting for about 7%.



It was the lowest excluding administrative budget.



However, this is only a mechanical classification, and the fact that most budgets, whether it is a family, youth, or women's policy, are welfare-oriented in which all family members share the benefits is a result of the team analysis.



(Video editing: Hong-myeong Lee, CG: Jae-eun Seong, Ji-hyun Ahn)