Monday, December 1, 2025

RUTH SUNDERLAND: A costly war is being waged on women

Must read

Five steps to protect your pension after Rachel Reeves’ salary sacrifice tax raid in the Budget

Protecting your pension wealth has scarcely been more important following Rachel Reeves' latest tax-grabbing Budget. The Chancellor's decision to impose national insurance contributions on workplace...

‘Just want to go to bed’: Lando Norris reflects on ‘bad weekend’ at Qatar Grand Prix

Asked how he will tackle the three-way title shootout in just seven days, Norris, who will dethrone Verstappen as champion if he finishes...

Schoolgirl, 11, wakes up locked inside school and alone in the dark after being ‘forgotten’ at nurse’s

The girl had fallen asleep in the school's infirmary after feeling ill - and was terrified when she woke to find herself in a...

Budget raid piles pressure on troubled shops and restaurants

By HUGO DUNCAN Updated: 19:05 EST, 30 November 2025 ...

We live in an increasingly divided, fearful and hostile world. One of those rifts is being created by misogyny, and it will hurt us all – men as well as women – if we are not careful.

The threat is all the greater because it is habitually minimised or totally overlooked. A failure to make the most of female talent means that, at a minimum, we are leaving economic growth on the table and missing out on innovation at a moment we can ill-afford it.

I recently appeared on a panel to discuss the ‘rifts and shifts’ facing the world, where historian Dr Martin Farr of Newcastle University specifically raised misogyny as a core geopolitical theme.

He is right. It belongs in the same conversation as populism, war, meeting future energy needs and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI).

Misogyny is a toxic thread in a cat’s cradle of uncertainties. Many of the seeming bedrocks on which we built our lives have been jolted.

A combination of Donald Trump, Covid-19, AI, Vladimir Putin and Andrew Tate has shaken the old order.

Insidious war: Misogyny will hurt us all – men as well as women – if we are not careful

Insidious war: Misogyny will hurt us all – men as well as women – if we are not careful

Free trade, progress against disease, faith in human reason and the equality of women: all were once seen as secure and all are under strain.

So too is democracy. Only about 6 per cent of the world’s population live in full democracies, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, and some 5.8billion people live under autocratic rule.

A sobering point. As is the finding of a UN report last year that nearly one in four governments presided over a backlash on women’s rights.

Did you know that? Nor did I. And that is the core of the problem.

This is moral injustice wrapped up in an economic threat.

Even the UK, where women enjoy unprecedented opportunities, balancing work with family life is exhausting.

Nobel Prize-winning economist Claudia Goldin warns that treating this as a purely personal issue ignores the long history of discrimination and the fragility of progress.

The emerging cult of the ‘strong man’ leader – and the macho language that surrounds it – is accompanied by open antagonism to women, embodied in figures such as social media personality Andrew Tate.

Economic shifts, exploited by populist politicians, have deprived some men in former manufacturing communities of the jobs they once had, leaving them adrift.

Their plight is real, but blaming ‘career women’ for their loss is as lazy as it is wrong. The flipside is fashionable nostalgia for the ‘trad-wife’, the woman who rejects the workplace for cupcakes and childcare.

Yet women surrender economic independence at their peril.

For every happy homemaker supported by a responsible (and rich) husband, plenty of others are left in the lurch.

To most women in the world, earnest discussions over the small number of female FTSE 100 chief executives or posts on Mumsnet over middle-class dads not doing enough child-care must seem indulgent chatter.

Still, we squander vast reserves of potential by failing to promote women on merit and by starving female entrepreneurs of growth capital.

It’s a shame for the cause of women that our first female Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has been such a disappointment to so many voters, though hardly an indictment of her entire sex.

We need to raise the level of debate, or we will all be losers in an insidious war against women.

DIY INVESTING PLATFORMS

Easy investing and ready-made portfolios

AJ Bell

Easy investing and ready-made portfolios

AJ Bell

Easy investing and ready-made portfolios

Free fund dealing and investment ideas

Hargreaves Lansdown

Free fund dealing and investment ideas

Hargreaves Lansdown

Free fund dealing and investment ideas

Flat-fee investing from £4.99 per month

interactive investor

Flat-fee investing from £4.99 per month

interactive investor

Flat-fee investing from £4.99 per month

Account and trading fee-free ETF investing

InvestEngine

Account and trading fee-free ETF investing

InvestEngine

Account and trading fee-free ETF investing

Free share dealing and no account fee

Trading 212

Free share dealing and no account fee

Trading 212

Free share dealing and no account fee

Affiliate links: If you take out a product This is Money may earn a commission. These deals are chosen by our editorial team, as we think they are worth highlighting. This does not affect our editorial independence.

Compare the best investing account for you



#RUTH #SUNDERLAND #costly #war #waged #women

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Five steps to protect your pension after Rachel Reeves’ salary sacrifice tax raid in the Budget

Protecting your pension wealth has scarcely been more important following Rachel Reeves' latest tax-grabbing Budget. The Chancellor's decision to impose national insurance contributions on workplace...

‘Just want to go to bed’: Lando Norris reflects on ‘bad weekend’ at Qatar Grand Prix

Asked how he will tackle the three-way title shootout in just seven days, Norris, who will dethrone Verstappen as champion if he finishes...

Schoolgirl, 11, wakes up locked inside school and alone in the dark after being ‘forgotten’ at nurse’s

The girl had fallen asleep in the school's infirmary after feeling ill - and was terrified when she woke to find herself in a...

Budget raid piles pressure on troubled shops and restaurants

By HUGO DUNCAN Updated: 19:05 EST, 30 November 2025 ...

Alexander Isak makes Liverpool admission after ending goal drought as Arne Slot reacts

British record signing breaks top-flight duck for new club in much-needed win over West Ham Source link