Irene Göttgens

Multiple Gender Dimensions 53 3 Table 1. Continued. Overall (n= 307) N (%) Women (n= 127) N (%) Men (n= 180) N (%) Division of household labour Household labour score (Mean ± SD)* 12.8 ± 3.2 14.1 ± 3.8 12.1 ± 2.6 Equally distributed 115 (48) 39 (46) 76 (49) Unequally distributed 123 (52) 45 (54) 78 (51) Unknown 3 3 0 Relative income 0% - 25% 26 (12) 24 (35) 2 (1) 26% - 50% 46 (21) 21 (30) 25 (17) 51% - 75% 67 (31) 20 (29) 47 (32) 76% - 100% 77 (36) 4 (6) 73 (50) Equally distributed 113 (52) 41 (59) 72 (49) Unequally distributed 103 (48) 28 (41) 75 (51) Unknown 25 18 7 Paid work None 251 (82) 107 (86) 144 (80) 1-20 hours 26 (8.5) 12 (9.6) 14 (7.8) 21-40 hours 23 (7.5) 5 (4.0) 18 (10) More than 40 hours 5 (1.6) 1 (0.8) 4 (2.2) Unknown 2 2 0 Unpaid work None 72 (24) 27 (22) 45 (26) 1-10 hours 169 (57) 67 (54) 102 (59) 11-20 hours 44 (15) 23 (18) 21 (12) More than 20 hours 14 (4.7) 8 (6.4) 6 (3.4) Unknown 8 2 6 On the dimension of Gender Relations in the private domain, 239 (81%) participants indicated to be married or to live together with a partner and the majority (89%) reported no children living at home. For the group that was married and/or lived together with a partner, the household task division was equally distributed in 48% of the cases, whereas relative income was equally distributed in 52% of the cases. Most of the participants did not perform any paid work (82%) and performed between 1 – 10 hours of unpaid work (57%) on average on a weekly basis. Significant differences were found between household task divisions and relative income and gender identity, with men being less engaged with household task (p <0.001) and having more relative income (p <0.001) compared to their partner/spouse.

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