Introduction
Gender inequalities and women’s empowerment in domains such as education, employment, and family decision-making remain central issues in the analysis of gender relations. These inequalities are socially constructed and are sustained by norms and stereotypes governing the division of labour and the roles attributed to each sex ; they define, in each sphere of life, what is deemed acceptable or unacceptable for women (Poggi & Waltmann, 2019 ; Ricard, 2016).
In Algeria, profound social changes have occurred over the last decades, particularly with regard to women’s access to education, their integration into the labour market, their access to positions of responsibility, and their participation in political and associative life. Women’s visible entry into paid work and their growing capacity to generate income have also contributed to changes in family roles and to a reconfiguration of decision-making processes within households (Hammouda, 2003 ; Oussedik et al., 2014). Yet, despite these advances, the renegotiation of women’s status and the effective reduction of gender inequalities remain incomplete.
Drawing on the Sahwa 2015/2016 national survey on Algerian youth, this article analyses young people’s opinions on women’s empowerment and gender equality in access to education, work and employment, economic decision-making, and inheritance rights. Although the literature on these issues is abundant, the originality of the study lies in its specific focus on young people aged 15 to 29. More precisely, the article seeks to determine the extent to which the traditional division of labour—structured around the opposition between women’s domestic space and men’s external space, and between male paid work and female unpaid work—continues to shape young people’s representations, and to identify the individual characteristics most likely to promote or hinder support for equality between women and men.
1. Literature Review: Women’s Empowerment in Algeria from Independence to the Present
In traditional patriarchal Algerian society, women’s role was largely confined to the domestic sphere and closely tied to reproduction, especially to the birth of a son. Having a boy conferred symbolic protection and a stronger right to speak within the family, while also helping to reproduce the patriarchal order. Although Islamic law explicitly recognizes women’s inheritance rights, these rights were often not effectively secured in practice ; this helps explain why many women endured repeated pregnancies in the hope of giving birth to a son (Oufriha, 1998).
After independence, however, women’s status began to change gradually, especially in relation to access to schooling and employment. This transformation was shaped by a combination of demographic, economic, and institutional factors.
Girls’ schooling improved markedly, and the gap between the sexes progressively narrowed. The school attendance rate for girls aged 6 to 14 rose from 36.9 % in 1966 to 97.1 % in 2019. In secondary education, girls outnumbered boys, accounting for 57 % of enrolments in 2020/2021 (Medjoub & Hammouda, 2022). Their academic success also explains their growing presence in higher education, where they represented 50.6 % of graduates as early as the 1998/1999 academic year (Ministry of Higher Education, 2011).
The democratization and free provision of education clearly contributed to reducing gender disparities in access to schooling. Yet the mass schooling of girls also resulted from a change in women’s aspirations and in their perception of daughters. Oufriha (1998) emphasizes that the real silent revolution lies in women’s desires and strategies: many no longer wish their daughters to experience the same destiny as previous generations. They therefore actively encourage girls’ schooling, all the more so because mothers and mothers-in-law historically played a central role in the social reproduction of patriarchal practices (Lacoste-Dujardin, 1985 ; Oufriha, 1998).
Economic transformations also played an important role. The crisis of 1986 and the effects of the structural adjustment plan in 1994—marked by the restructuring of public enterprises, massive layoffs, and rising unemployment—undermined the traditional economic role of men as sole providers. This context encouraged women’s labour-market participation, both to support household needs and to secure personal resources (National Office of Statistics, 1989). The contraction of employment opportunities and the decline in living standards contributed to an increase in the supply of female labour, with female labour force growth surpassing the normal growth rate of the female working-age population (National Office of Statistics, 1989).
Women’s trajectories nevertheless remained differentiated by educational attainment. Schooling challenged the traditional opposition between women in the private sphere and men in the public sphere by enabling more educated women to enter public space and gain access to paid employment, particularly in the public sector. This, in turn, increased their mobility relative to women who had failed at school or had never attended it (Oussedik, 2011 ; Talahite, 2008).
A second strategy developed within the domestic sphere itself, through the extension of domestic know-how into income-generating activities such as sewing and embroidery (Bernard, 1988). Historically, this kind of work was especially common among women with little schooling or only vocational training. Today, home-based work remains an important form of female economic activity and includes services such as childcare or the preparation of traditional cakes for religious celebrations and weddings—activities once understood as unpaid social obligations within the family but now increasingly converted into sources of income.
Whatever its form, women’s paid work constitutes a major factor of emancipation because it facilitates women’s insertion into public spaces traditionally reserved for men. Access to paid employment and contribution to the household budget also allow women to renegotiate their position within the family and to gain greater influence in decision-making (Hammouda, 2003 ; Oussedik et al., 2014).
Despite these developments, persistent inequalities remain. Spatial disparities continue to hinder girls’ schooling (Medjoub & Hammouda, 2022). Women face greater obstacles in accessing the labour market (Benhabib & Adair, 2017 ; Hammouda & Medjoub, 2016 ; Lassassi & Hammouda, 2012 ; Lassassi & Muller, 2013 ; Musette, 2013). Their labour-force participation rate remains among the lowest in the world, estimated at 13.8 %, while unemployment affects young women and female university graduates particularly strongly, with an unemployment rate of 23.9 % (ONS, 2019). Marriage and motherhood also increase the likelihood of women’s withdrawal from economic activity, especially after the birth of the first child (Lassassi & Hammouda, 2012).
2. Methodology
This article is based on the national survey on Algerian youth conducted by the Centre de Recherche en Économie Appliquée pour le Développement (CREAD) in 2015/2016 within the Sahwa project – Researching Arab Mediterranean Youth. To our knowledge, this remains the only national survey on Algerian youth that simultaneously addresses economic, social, cultural, and political dimensions.
Sahwa was a collaborative research programme led by the Barcelona Centre for International Affairs (CIDOB) and co-financed by the European Commission under its Seventh Framework Programme for Research. The project brought together fifteen partners from Europe and the Arab Mediterranean to investigate youth prospects and perceptions amid social, economic, and political transitions in five Arab countries: Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia (Sahwa Youth Survey, 2016). The authors were members of the Algerian Sahwa research team and participated in both the design and implementation of the survey.
The sample comprised 2,036 young people selected from 2,036 households. It covered 157 districts out of more than 41,000, 139 municipalities out of 1,541, and 32 wilayas out of 48.
Respondents were asked about gender equality in four main domains. In education, they were asked whether education is more important for boys than for girls and whether the same education should be provided to both sexes. In work, employment, and economic decision-making, they were asked whether a married woman should be able to work outside the home if she wishes, whether men and women should enjoy the same job opportunities and salaries, whether men should have priority when jobs are scarce, whether it would be fairer for men to participate in household chores and childcare, and whether men should be the main economic providers. In inheritance, respondents were asked whether women should enjoy their inheritance rights and whether parity in inheritance is desirable.
For each statement, young people were invited to choose one of four response categories: “Yes, absolutely”, “Yes, somewhat”, “No, not at all”, or “Do not know”. We then estimated ordinal regression models using respondents’ characteristics as explanatory variables: sex, age, level of education, occupational status, marital status, father’s level of education, mother’s level of education, wealth quintile, and place of residence. For each opinion, the statistically significant variables were classified into two groups: characteristics associated with support for equality between women and men, and characteristics associated with resistance to such equality.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. How do young people perceive women’s empowerment and gender equality?
The descriptive analysis of the opinions expressed by young people aged 15 to 29 regarding equality between women and men in access to education, the labour market, decision-making, and inheritance reveals several major tendencies.
A large majority of respondents (85.6%) believe that boys and girls should receive the same education, and more than two thirds reject the idea that education is more important for boys than for girls. Disaggregated by sex, the results show broad convergence between young women and young men on the principle of equal education. However, although girls defend their right to schooling more strongly than boys do, more than one third of young women still state that education is more important for boys, and more than 45% of young men share that opinion. This result suggests that, despite the growing legitimacy of girls’ schooling as a path to social mobility and self-realization, gender stereotypes concerning the value of education remain deeply embedded in the representations of both sexes.
The survey also indicates that the majority of young people continue to assign men the role of principal economic provider: 72% endorse this view. It is shared by a large majority of young men (84.6%) and by almost two thirds of young women. This finding confirms the endurance of a normative model linking masculinity to economic responsibility and authority within the family.
At the same time, strong gender asymmetries appear in attitudes toward women’s employment. Only about two young women out of ten oppose equality between women and men in access to jobs and wages, whereas more than half of young men (54%) reject such equality. More than three quarters of all respondents – and more than 70% of young women – believe that men should have priority when jobs are scarce. Moreover, 44% of young men oppose the idea that a married woman should be allowed to work outside the home if she wishes.
As regards domestic labour and childcare, nearly two thirds of young men agree that it would be fairer for men to contribute to household chores and care work. Yet almost one quarter of young women oppose this redistribution of domestic tasks and thus continue to defend a strongly gendered division of labour. Support for traditional arrangements is therefore not confined to men; it also informs a significant portion of women’s own representations.
Finally, the overwhelming majority of young people of both sexes support women’s right to inherit (90.8%). However, more than three quarters reject parity in inheritance shares, including 83.4% of young men and 71.8% of young women. Here, the findings point to the continuing influence of religious norms and interpretations in the formation of attitudes toward equality.
Table 1. Young people’s opinions on education
|
Young women |
Young men |
Total |
||||
|
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
|
|
Education is more important for boys than for girls. |
30.2 |
69.8 |
45.1 |
54.9 |
37.8 |
62.3 |
|
The same education should be provided to boys and girls. |
90.0 |
10.0 |
81.4 |
18.9 |
85.6 |
14.4 |
Source: Sahwa survey on Algerian youth, 2015/2016.
Table 2. Young people’s opinions on work, employment, and economic decision-making
|
Young women |
Young men |
Total |
||||
|
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
|
|
A married woman should have the opportunity to work outside the home if she wishes. |
83.8 |
16.2 |
55.8 |
44.2 |
69.6 |
30.4 |
|
Men and women should have the same job opportunities and receive the same salaries. |
79.5 |
20.5 |
46.1 |
53.9 |
62.6 |
37.4 |
|
When jobs are scarce, men should have greater access to jobs than women. |
70.3 |
29.7 |
84.9 |
15.1 |
77.7 |
22.3 |
|
It would be fairer if men contributed to household chores and childcare. |
75.6 |
24.4 |
58.3 |
41.7 |
66.8 |
33.2 |
|
Men should be the main economic providers in the family. |
83.6 |
16.4 |
87.0 |
13.0 |
85.3 |
14.7 |
Source: Sahwa survey on Algerian youth, 2015/2016.
Table 3. Young people’s opinions on inheritance
|
Young women |
Young men |
Total |
||||
|
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
Agree |
Disagree |
|
|
A woman should enjoy her right to inheritance. |
92.9 |
7.1 |
88.7 |
11.3 |
90.8 |
9.3 |
|
Parity in inheritance. |
28.2 |
71.8 |
16.6 |
83.4 |
22.3 |
77.7 |
Source: Sahwa survey on Algerian youth, 2015/2016.
3.2. Which sociodemographic characteristics promote or hinder gender equality?
The ordinal regression results confirm the strong effect of two major characteristics on attitudes toward equality between women and men: sex and level of education.
First, being male emerges as a cross-cutting factor associated with resistance to gender equality in all the areas examined. This pattern reflects the persistence of a patriarchal social order that may be defined, following Bonte and Izard (1991), as a form of social and legal organization grounded in male authority. Gender relations remain structured by the economic role historically assigned to men, a point clearly corroborated by the present findings. Indeed, none of the explanatory variables introduced in the models significantly affects the view that men should be the principal economic providers, which suggests that this norm remains broadly shared across the surveyed population. Because the economic role of men continues to legitimize their primacy in access to work, education, and decision-making, young men’s opposition to women’s empowerment can be understood not only as the effect of patriarchal socialization, but also as a defence of their dominant position within gendered power relations. In this sense, the results support the idea that progress toward equality begins with women’s economic empowerment, since access to resources destabilizes patriarchal values and redefines women’s place in society (Cova et al., 2009).
Second, educational attainment plays a decisive role. When respondents have a middle level of education or less, or only secondary education, their opinions are more frequently opposed to equality between women and men. By contrast, students display more favourable attitudes toward women’s status and rights. The higher the level of education, the more supportive respondents become of women’s access to employment and of the rejection of stereotypes concerning the traditional division of labour. University therefore appears as a key site of socialization, capable of transmitting more tolerant values and of weakening inherited prejudices.
Other variables also intervene. Indicators of social origin – father’s and mother’s education, wealth quintile, and residential setting – help explain several attitudes toward gender equality. Young people from disadvantaged families are more resistant to women’s empowerment and to women’s access to employment, especially when work opportunities are scarce; they are also more reluctant to endorse a more equal division of domestic labour.
Place of residence is significant above all for inheritance. Young people living in rural areas are more likely to oppose women’s inheritance rights. This may be linked to the relationship to land and to the persistence of patrilineal logics through which property is kept within the male line by depriving women of their effective inheritance rights.
Parental education also matters. Young people whose fathers or mothers are uneducated are more likely to oppose equality between women and men, especially with regard to women’s inheritance rights and equality in access to employment and salaries. These findings suggest that low parental schooling favours the intergenerational transmission of gender stereotypes. Conversely, having a mother with secondary education – already a relatively high level in the rural part of the sample – appears to distance young people from traditional norms, particularly on inheritance.
Marital status has a differentiated effect. Being single negatively affects support for the idea that boys and girls should receive the same education and for men’s participation in household chores and childcare, but it has a positive effect on support for equality in access to employment and wages.
Age is also significant. The youngest respondents (15–19 years) are more marked by sexist prejudices, especially concerning women’s inheritance rights. Respondents aged 20–24 are more likely to oppose a married woman’s right to work outside the home if she wishes. Finally, occupational status has a positive effect on opinions regarding the importance of education for both sexes.
Table 4. Sociodemographic characteristics that promote or hinder gender equality
|
Young people’s opinions |
Characteristics promoting gender equality |
Characteristics hindering gender equality |
|
Education |
||
|
Education is more important for boys than for girls. |
Worker |
Man; middle level or less; secondary level |
|
The same education should be provided to boys and girls. |
Student |
Man; middle level or less; single |
|
Work and employment |
||
|
A married woman should have the opportunity to work outside the home if she wishes. |
Student |
Man; middle level or less; secondary level; age 20–24 |
|
Men and women should have the same job opportunities and receive the same salaries. |
Student |
Man; respondent with an uneducated mother; middle level of education or less |
|
When jobs are scarce, men should have greater access to jobs than women. |
Single |
Man; poor |
|
It would be fairer if men contributed to household chores and childcare. |
Student |
Man; single; poor |
|
Economic decision-making |
||
|
In a family, men should make the decisions. |
Respondent with a mother with primary or secondary education |
Man; middle level or less; secondary level |
|
Men should be the main economic providers in the family. |
— |
— |
|
Inheritance |
||
|
A woman should enjoy her right to inheritance. |
Respondent with a mother with secondary education |
Man; respondent with an uneducated father; age 15–19; rural residence |
Source: Constructed from the ordinal regression results, Sahwa survey on Algerian youth, 2015/2016.
Conclusion
The Sahwa survey on Algerian youth offers important insight into contemporary representations of equality between women and men in Algeria. The analysis of young people’s opinions on women’s access to education, the labour market, economic decision-making, and inheritance leads to several main conclusions.
First, gender stereotypes remain deeply rooted in young people’s social imagination, especially in relation to economic questions and family authority. Young people of both sexes continue, to a large extent, to associate financial responsibility and headship of the household with men, and they grant men priority in access to employment and wages in times of crisis. Young men are particularly resistant to married women’s paid work and to equality in access to jobs and salaries, although they are somewhat more open to men’s participation in household chores and childcare. At the same time, a non-negligible proportion of young women also defend the traditional division of labour based on the opposition between women’s domestic work and men’s paid work. Such internalized norms may partly contribute to women’s self-censorship in relation to employment.
Second, although most respondents agree that girls and boys should receive the same education, stereotypes concerning the relative importance of education for boys remain present among both sexes. Inheritance attitudes reveal another important line of tension: while the vast majority recognize women’s right to inherit, most respondents reject parity in inheritance shares, highlighting the enduring weight of religiously grounded normative representations.
Third, the regression analyses show that sex and educational attainment are the most decisive explanatory variables. Being male consistently appears as a factor of systemic inequality across the domains studied, whereas university education has a positive effect on support for gender equality. Higher education thus appears not merely as a channel of certification, but also as a socializing experience capable of fostering more tolerant values and weakening inherited prejudices.
Finally, disadvantaged social origin, parental illiteracy, younger age, and rural residence all tend to be associated with greater resistance to women’s empowerment. Marital status and occupational status also shape attitudes in differentiated ways. Taken together, these findings underscore the need to understand gender equality not simply as a legal or policy issue, but as a question of socialization, symbolic order, and intergenerational transmission.
Appendix
The appendix reproduces the main sampling information and the ordinal regression outputs used in the analysis. The tables have been reformatted for readability while preserving the underlying values reported in the source manuscript.
The sampling frame for the Algerian Youth Survey consisted of 1,120 districts together with updated household lists initially prepared for the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS4), conducted by the Ministry of Health, Population, and Hospital Reform between December 2012 and January 2013. This frame was itself drawn from a broader database of more than 41,000 districts established during the 2008 General Population and Housing Census.
CREAD updated the frame in 2012 by selecting a subsample of districts from the MICS4 survey. The final youth survey sample comprised 2,036 households distributed across the national territory.
The survey used a two-stage probability sample without replacement. In the first stage, 157 clusters were drawn from the 1,120 clusters included in MICS4. In the second stage, 13 households were selected in each cluster, for an initial total of 2,041 households. Within these households, 2,036 young people aged 15 to 29 constituted the target population; five cases were excluded after fieldwork because the respondents were outside the age range selected for the survey.
The sampled clusters were stratified by Territorial Programming Area (TPA) and by place of residence (urban versus rural). TPAs are territorial planning zones defined within the framework of the Algerian National Land Use Plan (Schéma national d’aménagement du territoire).
The same proportions observed in the universe were used to determine the number of sampled clusters. Sampled clusters were then drawn by place of residence within each territorial programming area. Finally, households were selected with equal probabilities within each sampled cluster. Households without any young person aged 15 to 29 were not surveyed and were replaced directly in the field.
Appendix Table A1. Proportion of clusters in the universe and in the sample by place of residence
|
Universe |
Sample |
|||||
|
TPA |
Urban |
Rural |
Total |
Urban |
Rural |
Total |
|
North-Center |
19.1 |
12.6 |
31.7 |
18.5 |
12.1 |
30.6 |
|
North-East |
9.3 |
5.4 |
14.7 |
10.8 |
5.7 |
16.6 |
|
North-West |
9.8 |
5.2 |
15.0 |
8.9 |
5.7 |
14.6 |
|
Central Highlands |
4.7 |
2.8 |
7.5 |
4.5 |
2.5 |
7.0 |
|
Eastern Highlands |
8.3 |
6.2 |
14.6 |
8.3 |
6.4 |
14.6 |
|
Western Highlands |
3.7 |
2.2 |
5.8 |
3.8 |
2.5 |
6.4 |
|
Southern Highlands |
7.3 |
3.4 |
10.7 |
7.0 |
3.2 |
10.2 |
|
Total |
62.2 |
37.8 |
100.0 |
61.8 |
38.2 |
100.0 |
Appendix Table A2. Ordinal regression output: Education is more important for boys than for girls
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
-2.394 |
0.273 |
76.783 |
1 |
0.000 |
-2.930 |
-1.859 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
-1.097 |
0.269 |
16.688 |
1 |
0.000 |
-1.624 |
-0.571 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
0.485 |
0.268 |
3.280 |
1 |
0.070 |
-0.040 |
1.009 |
|
Location |
Male |
-0.761 |
0.089 |
73.647 |
1 |
0.000 |
-0.935 |
-0.587 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
-0.095 |
0.187 |
0.258 |
1 |
0.612 |
-0.462 |
0.272 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.016 |
0.188 |
0.007 |
1 |
0.934 |
-0.385 |
0.354 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.110 |
0.181 |
0.369 |
1 |
0.543 |
-0.464 |
0.244 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
-0.256 |
0.182 |
1.968 |
1 |
0.161 |
-0.613 |
0.102 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.097 |
0.248 |
0.154 |
1 |
0.695 |
-0.388 |
0.583 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.368 |
0.253 |
2.112 |
1 |
0.146 |
-0.128 |
0.865 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.032 |
0.251 |
0.017 |
1 |
0.898 |
-0.460 |
0.524 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.333 |
0.245 |
1.847 |
1 |
0.174 |
-0.147 |
0.813 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
0.242 |
0.107 |
5.168 |
1 |
0.023 |
0.033 |
0.451 |
|
Location |
student |
0.000 |
0.123 |
0.000 |
1 |
0.998 |
-0.240 |
0.241 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
-0.448 |
0.123 |
13.160 |
1 |
0.000 |
-0.689 |
-0.206 |
|
Location |
secondary |
-0.308 |
0.118 |
6.736 |
1 |
0.009 |
-0.540 |
-0.075 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
-0.103 |
0.145 |
0.503 |
1 |
0.478 |
-0.387 |
0.181 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.230 |
0.131 |
3.110 |
1 |
0.078 |
-0.026 |
0.486 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.059 |
0.104 |
0.320 |
1 |
0.572 |
-0.144 |
0.261 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A3. Ordinal regression output: The same education should be provided to boys and girls
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
1.006 |
0.291 |
11.965 |
1 |
0.001 |
0.436 |
1.576 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
3.210 |
0.299 |
115.004 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.624 |
3.797 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
4.981 |
0.323 |
237.673 |
1 |
0.000 |
4.348 |
5.614 |
|
Location |
Male |
0.733 |
0.093 |
61.983 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.551 |
0.916 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.128 |
0.199 |
0.411 |
1 |
0.522 |
-0.263 |
0.518 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.120 |
0.201 |
0.356 |
1 |
0.550 |
-0.514 |
0.274 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.053 |
0.192 |
0.075 |
1 |
0.784 |
-0.429 |
0.324 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
-0.025 |
0.194 |
0.017 |
1 |
0.898 |
-0.405 |
0.355 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.353 |
0.270 |
1.716 |
1 |
0.190 |
-0.175 |
0.881 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.331 |
0.274 |
1.458 |
1 |
0.227 |
-0.206 |
0.868 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.118 |
0.272 |
0.190 |
1 |
0.663 |
-0.414 |
0.651 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.139 |
0.265 |
0.276 |
1 |
0.599 |
-0.380 |
0.658 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
-0.124 |
0.112 |
1.220 |
1 |
0.269 |
-0.343 |
0.096 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.317 |
0.130 |
5.998 |
1 |
0.014 |
-0.571 |
-0.063 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.326 |
0.131 |
6.210 |
1 |
0.013 |
0.070 |
0.582 |
|
Location |
secondary |
0.217 |
0.126 |
2.980 |
1 |
0.084 |
-0.029 |
0.463 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.548 |
0.157 |
12.197 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.240 |
0.855 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.202 |
0.137 |
2.164 |
1 |
0.141 |
-0.067 |
0.471 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.100 |
0.109 |
0.838 |
1 |
0.360 |
-0.114 |
0.314 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.071 |
0.096 |
0.547 |
1 |
0.460 |
-0.117 |
0.259 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A4. Ordinal regression output: In a family, men should make the decisions
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
-1.046 |
0.276 |
14.390 |
1 |
0.000 |
-1.586 |
-0.506 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
0.539 |
0.275 |
3.852 |
1 |
0.050 |
0.001 |
1.078 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
2.358 |
0.285 |
68.588 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.800 |
2.916 |
|
Location |
Male |
-1.165 |
0.092 |
159.959 |
1 |
0.000 |
-1.346 |
-0.985 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
-0.196 |
0.191 |
1.054 |
1 |
0.305 |
-0.571 |
0.178 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.326 |
0.193 |
2.846 |
1 |
0.092 |
-0.704 |
0.053 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.126 |
0.184 |
0.474 |
1 |
0.491 |
-0.486 |
0.233 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
-0.296 |
0.186 |
2.525 |
1 |
0.112 |
-0.661 |
0.069 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.491 |
0.259 |
3.593 |
1 |
0.058 |
-0.017 |
0.998 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.720 |
0.263 |
7.507 |
1 |
0.006 |
0.205 |
1.236 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.275 |
0.261 |
1.104 |
1 |
0.293 |
-0.238 |
0.787 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.558 |
0.254 |
4.816 |
1 |
0.028 |
0.060 |
1.056 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
0.184 |
0.110 |
2.804 |
1 |
0.094 |
-0.031 |
0.400 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.042 |
0.126 |
0.114 |
1 |
0.736 |
-0.289 |
0.204 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
-0.445 |
0.125 |
12.567 |
1 |
0.000 |
-0.691 |
-0.199 |
|
Location |
secondary |
-0.440 |
0.120 |
13.386 |
1 |
0.000 |
-0.676 |
-0.204 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
-0.010 |
0.147 |
0.005 |
1 |
0.944 |
-0.299 |
0.278 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.172 |
0.134 |
1.647 |
1 |
0.199 |
-0.091 |
0.435 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.116 |
0.106 |
1.181 |
1 |
0.277 |
-0.093 |
0.324 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.020 |
0.093 |
0.045 |
1 |
0.832 |
-0.163 |
0.203 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A5. Ordinal regression output: A married woman should have the opportunity to work outside the home if she wishes
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
0.499 |
0.280 |
3.187 |
1 |
0.074 |
-0.049 |
1.048 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
2.691 |
0.287 |
87.865 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.128 |
3.253 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
4.232 |
0.296 |
203.985 |
1 |
0.000 |
3.651 |
4.813 |
|
Location |
Male |
1.296 |
0.095 |
187.727 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.111 |
1.481 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.374 |
0.195 |
3.688 |
1 |
0.055 |
-0.008 |
0.756 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.132 |
0.197 |
0.449 |
1 |
0.503 |
-0.254 |
0.517 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.150 |
0.188 |
0.640 |
1 |
0.424 |
-0.218 |
0.518 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.403 |
0.189 |
4.528 |
1 |
0.033 |
0.032 |
0.774 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.366 |
0.261 |
1.975 |
1 |
0.160 |
-0.145 |
0.877 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.080 |
0.265 |
0.090 |
1 |
0.764 |
-0.440 |
0.599 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.216 |
0.263 |
0.678 |
1 |
0.410 |
-0.298 |
0.731 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.117 |
0.256 |
0.208 |
1 |
0.648 |
-0.385 |
0.619 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
-0.127 |
0.109 |
1.362 |
1 |
0.243 |
-0.341 |
0.087 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.401 |
0.127 |
10.031 |
1 |
0.002 |
-0.649 |
-0.153 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.684 |
0.128 |
28.658 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.434 |
0.934 |
|
Location |
secondary |
0.256 |
0.122 |
4.362 |
1 |
0.037 |
0.016 |
0.496 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.235 |
0.150 |
2.453 |
1 |
0.117 |
-0.059 |
0.529 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.235 |
0.134 |
3.079 |
1 |
0.079 |
-0.028 |
0.498 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.222 |
0.107 |
4.347 |
1 |
0.037 |
0.013 |
0.431 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.029 |
0.094 |
0.099 |
1 |
0.753 |
-0.154 |
0.213 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A6. Ordinal regression output: Men and women should have the same job opportunities and receive the same salaries
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
-0.054 |
0.273 |
0.039 |
1 |
0.843 |
-0.590 |
0.481 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
1.803 |
0.277 |
42.466 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.261 |
2.346 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
3.501 |
0.285 |
150.624 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.942 |
4.061 |
|
Location |
Male |
1.430 |
0.094 |
232.723 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.246 |
1.614 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
-0.231 |
0.191 |
1.473 |
1 |
0.225 |
-0.605 |
0.142 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.234 |
0.192 |
1.482 |
1 |
0.223 |
-0.611 |
0.143 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.199 |
0.183 |
1.179 |
1 |
0.277 |
-0.559 |
0.160 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.105 |
0.185 |
0.320 |
1 |
0.571 |
-0.258 |
0.467 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.540 |
0.255 |
4.477 |
1 |
0.034 |
0.040 |
1.041 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.295 |
0.260 |
1.292 |
1 |
0.256 |
-0.214 |
0.804 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.256 |
0.257 |
0.995 |
1 |
0.319 |
-0.248 |
0.760 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.165 |
0.251 |
0.434 |
1 |
0.510 |
-0.326 |
0.656 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
0.010 |
0.108 |
0.009 |
1 |
0.926 |
-0.201 |
0.221 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.362 |
0.125 |
8.408 |
1 |
0.004 |
-0.607 |
-0.117 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.445 |
0.125 |
12.625 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.200 |
0.691 |
|
Location |
secondary |
0.163 |
0.120 |
1.832 |
1 |
0.176 |
-0.073 |
0.399 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
-0.005 |
0.147 |
0.001 |
1 |
0.975 |
-0.293 |
0.284 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.197 |
0.133 |
2.207 |
1 |
0.137 |
-0.063 |
0.457 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.188 |
0.105 |
3.197 |
1 |
0.074 |
-0.018 |
0.394 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
-0.014 |
0.092 |
0.022 |
1 |
0.881 |
-0.195 |
0.167 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A7. Ordinal regression output: Men should be the primary economic providers in the family
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
0.527 |
0.286 |
3.400 |
1 |
0.065 |
-0.033 |
1.087 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
2.321 |
0.291 |
63.676 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.751 |
2.892 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
4.003 |
0.312 |
164.333 |
1 |
0.000 |
3.391 |
4.615 |
|
Location |
Male |
-0.046 |
0.091 |
0.254 |
1 |
0.615 |
-0.225 |
0.133 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.199 |
0.197 |
1.012 |
1 |
0.314 |
-0.188 |
0.585 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.044 |
0.199 |
0.050 |
1 |
0.823 |
-0.346 |
0.435 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.142 |
0.190 |
0.562 |
1 |
0.453 |
-0.230 |
0.514 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.107 |
0.192 |
0.310 |
1 |
0.578 |
-0.269 |
0.483 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.306 |
0.267 |
1.312 |
1 |
0.252 |
-0.217 |
0.829 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.350 |
0.271 |
1.668 |
1 |
0.197 |
-0.181 |
0.882 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.244 |
0.269 |
0.822 |
1 |
0.364 |
-0.283 |
0.771 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.280 |
0.262 |
1.136 |
1 |
0.286 |
-0.235 |
0.794 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
0.011 |
0.112 |
0.010 |
1 |
0.922 |
-0.208 |
0.230 |
|
Location |
student |
0.060 |
0.128 |
0.216 |
1 |
0.642 |
-0.192 |
0.311 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
-0.115 |
0.128 |
0.796 |
1 |
0.372 |
-0.366 |
0.137 |
|
Location |
secondary |
-0.104 |
0.123 |
0.714 |
1 |
0.398 |
-0.345 |
0.137 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.264 |
0.154 |
2.945 |
1 |
0.086 |
-0.037 |
0.565 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
-0.080 |
0.137 |
0.342 |
1 |
0.559 |
-0.348 |
0.188 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.020 |
0.108 |
0.033 |
1 |
0.856 |
-0.193 |
0.232 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.019 |
0.095 |
0.039 |
1 |
0.844 |
-0.168 |
0.205 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A8. Ordinal regression output: Women should enjoy their right to inheritance
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
0.629 |
0.290 |
4.711 |
1 |
0.030 |
0.061 |
1.197 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
3.023 |
0.299 |
102.007 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.436 |
3.609 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
4.072 |
0.314 |
167.889 |
1 |
0.000 |
3.456 |
4.688 |
|
Location |
Male |
0.414 |
0.094 |
19.289 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.230 |
0.599 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.527 |
0.207 |
6.487 |
1 |
0.011 |
0.122 |
0.933 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.386 |
0.209 |
3.416 |
1 |
0.065 |
-0.023 |
0.796 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.322 |
0.201 |
2.582 |
1 |
0.108 |
-0.071 |
0.716 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.286 |
0.202 |
2.000 |
1 |
0.157 |
-0.111 |
0.683 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.017 |
0.270 |
0.004 |
1 |
0.951 |
-0.512 |
0.545 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.256 |
0.275 |
0.865 |
1 |
0.352 |
-0.795 |
0.283 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.569 |
0.274 |
4.306 |
1 |
0.038 |
-1.106 |
-0.032 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
-0.310 |
0.266 |
1.357 |
1 |
0.244 |
-0.831 |
0.211 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
-0.117 |
0.114 |
1.043 |
1 |
0.307 |
-0.340 |
0.107 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.167 |
0.132 |
1.598 |
1 |
0.206 |
-0.425 |
0.092 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.081 |
0.132 |
0.371 |
1 |
0.542 |
-0.179 |
0.340 |
|
Location |
secondary |
0.032 |
0.128 |
0.061 |
1 |
0.805 |
-0.219 |
0.282 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.093 |
0.156 |
0.355 |
1 |
0.551 |
-0.213 |
0.399 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.319 |
0.140 |
5.217 |
1 |
0.022 |
0.045 |
0.594 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.116 |
0.111 |
1.083 |
1 |
0.298 |
-0.102 |
0.334 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.212 |
0.097 |
4.790 |
1 |
0.029 |
0.022 |
0.403 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A9. Ordinal regression output: In times of job scarcity, men should have more employment rights than women
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
-0.021 |
0.280 |
0.006 |
1 |
0.940 |
-0.569 |
0.527 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
1.644 |
0.282 |
33.898 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.091 |
2.197 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
2.996 |
0.291 |
105.755 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.425 |
3.567 |
|
Location |
Male |
-0.736 |
0.092 |
64.501 |
1 |
0.000 |
-0.915 |
-0.556 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.241 |
0.196 |
1.509 |
1 |
0.219 |
-0.143 |
0.625 |
|
Location |
Primary |
-0.066 |
0.198 |
0.110 |
1 |
0.740 |
-0.454 |
0.322 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.250 |
0.188 |
1.776 |
1 |
0.183 |
-0.118 |
0.618 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.075 |
0.190 |
0.156 |
1 |
0.693 |
-0.297 |
0.447 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.371 |
0.263 |
1.999 |
1 |
0.157 |
-0.143 |
0.886 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.168 |
0.267 |
0.397 |
1 |
0.528 |
-0.355 |
0.692 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.268 |
0.263 |
1.037 |
1 |
0.308 |
-0.248 |
0.784 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.409 |
0.256 |
2.540 |
1 |
0.111 |
-0.094 |
0.911 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
-0.184 |
0.112 |
2.692 |
1 |
0.101 |
-0.403 |
0.036 |
|
Location |
student |
0.022 |
0.127 |
0.030 |
1 |
0.863 |
-0.227 |
0.270 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.065 |
0.128 |
0.263 |
1 |
0.608 |
-0.185 |
0.316 |
|
Location |
secondary |
-0.097 |
0.122 |
0.624 |
1 |
0.430 |
-0.336 |
0.143 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.477 |
0.153 |
9.704 |
1 |
0.002 |
0.177 |
0.778 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
-0.061 |
0.136 |
0.200 |
1 |
0.655 |
-0.327 |
0.205 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.025 |
0.108 |
0.054 |
1 |
0.817 |
-0.187 |
0.237 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.044 |
0.096 |
0.209 |
1 |
0.647 |
-0.144 |
0.232 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Poor |
-0.287 |
0.110 |
6.836 |
1 |
0.009 |
-0.502 |
-0.072 |
|
Location |
Middle |
-0.153 |
0.115 |
1.790 |
1 |
0.181 |
-0.378 |
0.071 |
|
Location |
Rich |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
Appendix Table A10. Ordinal regression output: It would be more equitable if men participated in household chores and childcare
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
||||
|
Estimate |
Std. Error |
Wald |
df |
Sig. |
Lower bound |
Upper bound |
||
|
Threshold |
1 Agree strongly |
0.110 |
0.275 |
0.160 |
1 |
0.690 |
-0.430 |
0.649 |
|
Threshold |
2 Agree |
2.126 |
0.280 |
57.602 |
1 |
0.000 |
1.577 |
2.675 |
|
Threshold |
3 Disagree |
3.410 |
0.286 |
141.715 |
1 |
0.000 |
2.849 |
3.972 |
|
Location |
Male |
0.759 |
0.091 |
69.172 |
1 |
0.000 |
0.580 |
0.937 |
|
Location |
Female |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (father) |
0.231 |
0.195 |
1.412 |
1 |
0.235 |
-0.150 |
0.613 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.179 |
0.196 |
0.835 |
1 |
0.361 |
-0.205 |
0.563 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.162 |
0.187 |
0.755 |
1 |
0.385 |
-0.203 |
0.528 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.054 |
0.188 |
0.082 |
1 |
0.774 |
-0.315 |
0.423 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
No education (mother) |
0.132 |
0.258 |
0.262 |
1 |
0.609 |
-0.374 |
0.638 |
|
Location |
Primary |
0.110 |
0.262 |
0.176 |
1 |
0.675 |
-0.404 |
0.625 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.174 |
0.259 |
0.449 |
1 |
0.503 |
-0.334 |
0.681 |
|
Location |
Secondary |
0.102 |
0.252 |
0.165 |
1 |
0.685 |
-0.392 |
0.597 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
employed |
-0.013 |
0.110 |
0.014 |
1 |
0.906 |
-0.228 |
0.202 |
|
Location |
student |
-0.259 |
0.126 |
4.255 |
1 |
0.039 |
-0.506 |
-0.013 |
|
Location |
NEET |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Middle or less (young) |
0.237 |
0.127 |
3.494 |
1 |
0.062 |
-0.012 |
0.486 |
|
Location |
secondary |
0.111 |
0.122 |
0.834 |
1 |
0.361 |
-0.127 |
0.349 |
|
Location |
Higher |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Single |
0.435 |
0.151 |
8.316 |
1 |
0.004 |
0.139 |
0.730 |
|
Location |
Married |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
1 <= 19 |
0.239 |
0.134 |
3.176 |
1 |
0.075 |
-0.024 |
0.502 |
|
Location |
2 20 - 24 |
0.096 |
0.107 |
0.808 |
1 |
0.369 |
-0.113 |
0.305 |
|
Location |
3 25+ |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Rural |
0.144 |
0.095 |
2.317 |
1 |
0.128 |
-0.041 |
0.330 |
|
Location |
Urban |
0a |
0 |
|||||
|
Location |
Poor |
0.280 |
0.108 |
6.727 |
1 |
0.009 |
0.068 |
0.491 |
|
Location |
Middle |
0.087 |
0.113 |
0.587 |
1 |
0.444 |
-0.135 |
0.309 |
|
Location |
Rich |
0a |
0 |
|||||
Note. The notation 0a indicates the reference category used in the model output.
