One in three young Japanese women wants to be housewives: Poll

Women buy fruits and vegetables from a street vendor in Tokyo on Aug 30, 2013. One in three young Japanese women wants to get married and be a full-time housewife, a government survey has showed, despite growing calls for increased female partic
Women buy fruits and vegetables from a street vendor in Tokyo on Aug 30, 2013. One in three young Japanese women wants to get married and be a full-time housewife, a government survey has showed, despite growing calls for increased female participation in the workforce. -- FILE PHOTO: AFP

TOKYO (AFP) - One in three young Japanese women wants to get married and be a full-time housewife, a government survey has showed, despite growing calls for increased female participation in the workforce.

The poll, which quizzed more than 3,000 people aged 15-39, found 34 per cent of unmarried women did not want to work when they settled down.

But the survey, by the Health, Labour and Welfare Ministry, found that men were on the whole less keen on the idea, with only one in five saying they wanted a future wife to stay at home all day.

Despite high levels of education, many women in Japan drop out of the workforce when they have children, and social pressures to play the homemaker remain strong.

Experts at home and abroad, notably International Monetary Fund director Christine Lagarde, have argued that women could rescue Japan's chronically under-performing economy if more of them went to work.

The nation's male-dominated, shrinking labour market is being hit by retiring babyboomers and a falling birthrate, which is putting extra pressure on the nation's finances as it tries to fund a growing pension pot from a shrinking pool of workers.

As part of an overhaul aimed at getting the economy moving again, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pledged to expand business opportunities for women.

Earlier this week, his foreign minister told a United Nations forum that by 2020, 30 per cent of senior government positions would be held by women. At present only two of the 19 members of the cabinet are women.

The survey, conducted on the Internet in late March and released this week, found younger women tended not to be looking for potential husbands who can bring home a huge pay cheque.

More than 40 per cent said they wanted a moderate, but stable lifestyle, and would be happy with a household take-home pay of 200,000-300,000 yen (S$2,536 - S$3,804) a month to live off after marriage.

There was no breakdown in the poll detailing how many respondents did not want to get married in the first place.

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