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government is conducting a survey every five years on the perception of gender equality in our society.

According to a recent survey, the response that men and women feel equal has increased, and the difference is large when comparing men and women in their 20s.



Reporter Jung Da-eun on the sidewalk.




<Reporter>



Men provide livelihoods, women raise children.



Stereotypes of traditional gender roles have faded over the past five years.



[Kim Bo-seong/Early 20s: (Housework work) is done by someone who has time, and it is better to share both of them rather than doing it too much for the mother.

That's fair.]



The perception has changed, but there is also a gap with reality.



[Lee Yoo-jeong/Mid 20s: People's perceptions seem to be improving, but I think there are many things that are difficult to put into practice.]



A look at the government's survey on gender equality last year.



'When asked whether men should be primarily responsible for the livelihood of their families, 47.5% of men and 40.0% of women over the age of 60 agreed, but 17.5% of men and 9.6% of women in their 20s agreed.



The number of people who agree that women have the primary responsibility for caring for their children has dropped significantly from 5 in 10 to 2 in 10 five years ago.



So what about actual care time?



For dual-income households, it was 42 minutes per day for men and 1 hour 24 minutes for women, twice as long for mothers.



The majority of women in their 30s and 40s answered that they had more time for housework and care due to the corona virus.



The perception of gender equality has also changed.



While 65.4% of women answered that 'our society is unequal to women', only 41.4% of men.



The gap was the largest in their 20s, where 73.4% of women agreed, while only 29.2% of men agreed.



Violence against women, such as illegal filmed footage, was 'serious' for both men and women the same as five years ago.



As a priority task for resolving inequality, 69.2% of the respondents chose 'cutting off women's careers' the most.



(Video editing: Park Ki-duk, CG: Jeon Yu-geun, VJ: Shin So-young)