At first glance, this may seem justified, as Britain does fairly well on international indices of actual gender inequality. According to the World Economic Forum, in 2020 Britain was ranked as the 21st most gender-equal country.
But it also seems likely that this is complacency. Other countries that rank even higher on objective measures of gender equality are still more concerned than Britain. For example, 42% of people in Spain say it is one of the most serious forms of inequality, despite their country ranking as eighth best in the world for gender equality. And 37% of Swedes say the same – even though their nation comes higher still, ranking fourth globally.
Concern about gender inequality, then, appears to be unrelated to a nation’s actual performance on the issue. This will reflect both variations in the cultural importance of this issue across countries and the recognition among nations that are doing relatively well that there is still a long way to go.
People in Britain don’t seem to have that in mind, despite the burgeoning evidence of widening gender inequalities during the pandemic, with women experiencing higher rates of job loss, being furloughed for longer and spending more time on childcare and home-schooling than men.
Meanwhile, the recent report by the the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities has divided opinion about the extent and nature of discrimination faced by ethnic minorities in the UK – but our study shows it remains a priority for many Britons. Racial inequality ranks third in the overall list of the most important inequality types in Britain, picked out by 36%, behind only economic and area-based inequalities. This is significantly higher than in Europe as a whole (29%), and suggests that many of the British public are not complacent about the need to do more.
The aftershock of the pandemic seems set to bring growing inequalities of all types further into the spotlight, and public opinion is vital to understand in this context. Not addressing the issues that people see as most important and most unfair is a sure way to undermine faith in the system overall. But when deciding what to prioritise, we need to interpret public perceptions carefully, neither being led by nor ignoring them.
This article was originally published in the Conversation.