Leaders | Angry young men

Making sense of the gulf between young men and women

It’s complicated. But better schooling for boys might help

A young man and woman stand with their backs to each other either side of a deep crack in the ground
Illustration: Louise Pomeroy

Men and women have different experiences, so you would expect them to have different worldviews. Nonetheless, the growing gulf between young men and women in developed countries is striking. Polling data from 20 such countries shows that, whereas two decades ago there was little difference between the share of men and women aged 18-29 who described themselves as liberal rather than conservative, the gap has grown to 25 percentage points. Young men also seem more anti-feminist than older men, bucking the trend for each generation to be more liberal than its predecessor. Polls from 27 European countries found that men under 30 were more likely than those over 65 to agree that “advancing women’s and girls’ rights has gone too far because it threatens men’s and boys’ opportunities”. Similar results can be found in Britain, South Korea and China. Young women were likely to believe the opposite.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Young men and women are drifting apart”

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