Hungary is seeing as a national problem more girls graduate than boys

A <x0).>Reducation phenomenon” in Hungary that favours women could jeopardise the economy, lower birth rates and men's disadvantages, a report says. Women are overrepresented in Hungarian higher education, according to parliament's economic overseer, viewed as close to Prime Minister Viktor Orban. The authors warned that an increase in women [...]
Women are overrepresented in Hungarian higher education, according to parliament's economic overseer, viewed as close to Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
The authors warned that an increase in graduates may make women less inclined to marry and have children.
Orban has sought to increase Hungary's low birth rate, reports Bubc.
In 2019 he announced that women with four children will be exempted from paying income tax for life, photographic transmission.
The report, from the State Auditor's Office, was released last month, but its findings were just received by the Nepszava newspaper. Its contents have been criticised by some Hungarian politicians and human rights experts.
Over the past decade, he found that more women than men were enrolled in the universities of Hungary with the number this autumn at 54.5 percent. Male students, meanwhile, abandoned him at a higher rate and suggested that femininization of the teacher's profession may have led 82 percent of teachers to be female.
The report found that female “tiforms, such as emotional and social maturity, were favoured in Hungary's educational system, which meant that sexual equality would be “produced significantly”.
Researchers warned that Hungary's economy could be jeopardised if the male “tiparities” were underestimated, which they listed as technical skills, risk taking and entrepreneurship.
The report concluded that this could affect everyday life with young people losing what to do with a frozen <x0 computer, a tap, or full furniture, and there is no one to unite”.
Hungary has faced criticism of its gender inequality for some time. After a visit in 2019, Council of Europe Commissioner for Rights Dunja Mijatovic said Hungary is returning to gender equality and women's rights.
Hungary recently elected its first female president, Catalin Novak, but continues to have the lowest percentage of female politicians in the European Union.
Currently, it is being indicted by the European Commission for a <x0 law against homosexuals” that prohibits the description of homosexuality at under 18.
Victor Orban, who has repeatedly clashed with the EU on issues of rule of law such as press freedom and migration, has described the vision for Hungary as a “unliberal democracy”.












