Gender Equality Index
The Gender Equality Index (GEI) is a composite indicator developed by the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) to assess gender equality in the European Union and its member states by measuring disparities between women and men across six domains: work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health.[1][2] It aggregates data from 31 indicators organized into 14 subdomains, scoring each from 1 (complete inequality) to 100 (full equality) using a geometric mean to emphasize balanced progress, with the EU average reaching 71 points in 2024, up 0.8 points from 2023 but indicating persistent gaps, especially in power (61.4 points) and time.[1][3] Launched in 2010, the index aims to monitor policy impacts and highlight areas needing intervention, such as decision-making representation and unpaid care work, though EU-wide improvements have averaged less than 1 point annually.[1] While the GEI has informed EU gender mainstreaming strategies and revealed trends like widening intra-EU divergences, its methodology—incorporating sex ratios adjusted by achievement levels and selective corrections—has drawn criticism for conflating gender gaps with absolute outcomes, distorting measurements via ratio usage over differences, and exhibiting poor statistical validity in confirmatory factor analysis, potentially biasing results toward high-GDP models and measuring "gender-related achievement" rather than genuine equality.[4] Scholars argue these flaws, including inconsistent application of corrections across indicators and lack of transparency in weighting, undermine its claim to capture multi-dimensional equality, favoring prescriptive sameness in outcomes irrespective of causal factors like preferences or structural realities.[4] Despite such debates, the index remains a key tool in European policy discourse, underscoring slow convergence toward parity amid domain-specific stagnation.[1]
Origins and Development
Establishment of the European Institute for Gender Equality
The European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) was established through Regulation (EC) No 1922/2006, adopted by the European Parliament and the Council on 20 December 2006.[5] This legislation created EIGE as an independent Community body with legal personality to actively promote equality between women and men, facilitate gender mainstreaming across EU policies, and combat discrimination based on sex.[5] The regulation outlined EIGE's core objectives, including raising public awareness of gender equality issues and supporting EU institutions and member states in integrating gender perspectives into their activities.[5] EIGE's foundational tasks, as defined in the regulation, encompass collecting, analyzing, and disseminating comparative data on gender equality; developing methodological tools for gender mainstreaming; and establishing a European network to exchange best practices among gender equality actors.[5] Governance structures include a management board comprising representatives from member states and the European Commission, with a director appointed for a renewable five-year term to oversee operations.[5] The regulation stipulated that EIGE should become operational by 19 January 2008, though in practice, full independence and functionality were delayed due to the need to select a headquarters location and complete setup processes.[5] The institute's seat was designated in Vilnius, Lithuania, following EU negotiations on agency locations, and EIGE officially opened to the public on 20–21 June 2010, marking the start of its operational activities.[6] This timeline reflects typical challenges in establishing EU agencies, including political agreements on hosting countries and resource allocation.[7] From inception, EIGE has functioned as a knowledge center, providing technical support and data-driven insights to advance gender equality objectives without direct enforcement powers.[7]Initial Creation and Evolution of the Index
The Gender Equality Index was proposed by the European Commission as part of its Roadmap for Equality between Women and Men (2006–2010) and the subsequent Strategy for Equality between Women and Men (2010–2015) Action Plan, with the aim of creating a composite tool to monitor gender gaps across EU member states.[8] Following the establishment of the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) in 2010, the Index was designated a priority in EIGE's inaugural Mid-term Work Programme (2010–2012), initiating a multi-year development effort to produce a multidimensional assessment aligned with EU gender equality policies.[8] Development involved collaboration among EIGE's internal working group, management board, experts' forum, and external specialists, building on prior feasibility studies by Plantenga et al. in 2003, 2009, and 2011 that outlined structural frameworks for measuring gender disparities.[8] The process adhered to OECD/JRC guidelines for composite indicators, encompassing over 3,000 computational simulations, multivariate analysis, and robustness testing across 10 methodological steps, including variable selection and aggregation via arithmetic and geometric means weighted by expert input (e.g., Analytic Hierarchy Process).[8] Data for the initial version drew primarily from Eurostat and Eurofound sources, focusing on 2010 figures for the EU-27, with 27 indicators disaggregated by sex to quantify gaps on a 1–100 scale (1 indicating complete inequality, 100 full equality).[8] The Index's inaugural report was released in March 2013, yielding an EU-wide score of 54.0 and revealing persistent gaps, particularly in power (score 30.5) and time (care activities, score 63.7), while highlighting relative strengths in health and employment.[8] Its framework comprised six core domains—work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health—plus two satellite domains (intersecting inequalities and violence) hampered by data limitations, emphasizing gender gaps rather than absolute levels to reflect policy priorities like reversing educational reversals or unpaid labor disparities.[8] Subsequent iterations evolved to address data gaps and policy needs: biennial updates in 2015 and 2017 incorporated refined indicators and trend tracking, with methodological adjustments post-2017 enhancing aggregation and domain coverage.[4] From 2019 onward, publication shifted to annual cycles, integrating a core Index with expanded satellite measures, including fuller integration of violence against women data from surveys like the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights' 2014 report, enabling scores for that domain (e.g., EU average 11.6 in 2020).[1] Recent developments include 2023–2024 emphases on intersecting factors like disability and green transitions, alongside announcements of a revamped methodology for the 2025 edition to improve data harmonization and indicator relevance amid evolving EU priorities.[9][10]Conceptual Framework
Definition and Measurement of Gender Equality
The Gender Equality Index conceptualizes gender equality as the achievement of parity between women and men in access to resources, participation in decision-making, and outcomes across economic, social, and cultural spheres. Developed by the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), it operationalizes this through a framework that quantifies disparities rather than absolute achievements, positing that full equality corresponds to the elimination of gender gaps.[1] This approach assumes that observed differences in outcomes reflect inequalities unless proven otherwise, drawing on EU policy objectives outlined in Article 8 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, which mandates mainstreaming gender equality.[11] Measurement of gender equality in the Index relies on a composite score derived from gender gap calculations across indicators. For each indicator, the score is computed as 1 minus the relative gender gap, where the gap is the absolute difference between female and male values divided by the maximum possible disparity (often 100% or domain-specific benchmarks), yielding values from 0 (maximum inequality) to 100 (no inequality).[12] Domain scores aggregate sub-indicators using geometric means to emphasize balanced progress, with equal weighting across core domains unless adjusted for policy priorities. The overall Index score, thus, reflects the average distance from full parity, with the EU average reaching 68.6 in 2023, indicating that gender equality remains incomplete. Critics contend that this measurement framework conflates equality of outcome with equality of opportunity, potentially overstating inequalities by treating voluntary gender differences—such as in career choices or unpaid care work—as deficits rather than preferences. A 2023 peer-reviewed analysis highlights methodological flaws, including the failure to distinguish between discriminatory barriers and self-selection, and the geometric aggregation's sensitivity to outliers, which may bias scores against countries with diverse gender role adoptions.[4] Such critiques underscore institutional tendencies in EU bodies like EIGE to prioritize outcome parity, which aligns with progressive policy agendas but risks misrepresenting causal factors like biological predispositions or cultural norms supported by empirical studies on sex differences in interests.[4] Despite these limitations, the Index's empirical grounding in harmonized Eurostat data provides a consistent, if imperfect, tool for tracking disparities.[1]Underlying Assumptions and First-Principles Considerations
The Gender Equality Index (GEI), developed by the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), presupposes that gender equality is quantifiable primarily through the magnitude of disparities—or "gaps"—in outcomes between men and women across specified domains, such as employment participation rates, earnings, educational attainment, unpaid care work distribution, decision-making representation, and health access.[1] This approach assumes that deviations from parity in these metrics inherently signal inequality, with a score of 1 representing complete equality (zero gaps) and lower scores reflecting persistent differences, aggregated via a geometric mean to emphasize balanced progress across domains rather than arithmetic averaging.[8] The methodology further embeds the assumption that domains are non-substitutable, meaning deficits in one area (e.g., power) cannot be fully offset by strengths in another (e.g., health), as the geometric aggregation imposes a penalty for imbalances.[4] Critically, this framework treats observed gender differences as prima facie evidence of systemic barriers, without distinguishing between those arising from discrimination or institutional constraints and those potentially rooted in individual preferences, biological variances, or voluntary trade-offs. For instance, the index scores lower female representation in high-level positions as inequality, presuming it reflects exclusion rather than, say, differing average interests in competitive or hierarchical roles, where empirical studies across diverse societies indicate women disproportionately select fields emphasizing people over things or flexibility over long hours.[13] Such an outcome-oriented metric conflates equality of opportunity with enforced sameness in results, overlooking causal factors like sex-based differences in risk tolerance, spatial abilities, or life priorities, which meta-analyses of vocational interests show are consistent globally and uncorrelated with societal egalitarianism levels.[14][4] From causal realist perspectives, true gender equality at foundational levels requires equal legal protections against coercion and equal starting opportunities, but not the erasure of probabilistic differences in endpoints, as human agency and inherent traits—shaped by evolutionary pressures—naturally yield divergent distributions without implying injustice. The GEI's gap-closing imperative risks pathologizing adaptive choices, such as women's higher propensity for part-time work to accommodate caregiving, which correlates with satisfaction and well-being metrics rather than dissatisfaction from constraint.[1] Moreover, by not weighting domains by empirical impact on overall welfare or adjusting for absolute achievement levels (e.g., penalizing gaps in low-performing economies similarly to high ones), the index assumes a universal benchmark of parity divorced from contextual productivity or cultural norms, potentially incentivizing policies that prioritize statistical symmetry over substantive freedoms.[4] This methodological stance, while presented as neutral, aligns with institutional priorities in EU bodies that emphasize outcome convergence, yet invites scrutiny given evidence that forced interventions in preferences can reduce efficiency and happiness without addressing root causes.[13]Methodology
Data Sources and Indicator Selection
The Gender Equality Index utilizes 31 indicators distributed across six core domains—work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health—plus a satellite domain on violence, selected to quantify gender disparities in access, participation, and outcomes. Indicators are chosen for their relevance to EU gender equality objectives, including the European Pillar of Social Rights and the 2020–2025 Gender Equality Strategy, prioritizing metrics that are quantifiable, comparable across Member States, and supported by reliable data. The selection process incorporates expert consultations to ensure coverage of structural inequalities while addressing data gaps, with adjustments for policy alignment rather than exhaustive theoretical coverage; for instance, indicators focus on observable gaps but may overlook causal factors like biological differences or individual choices. Each indicator measures the gender gap on a 0–1 scale, where 1 denotes equality, scaled against EU-wide best performers to account for achievement levels.[1][15] Primary data sources consist of harmonized EU-wide surveys and administrative records to facilitate cross-national consistency, though coverage and frequency vary by domain. The work domain draws from the EU Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) for employment rates, sectoral segregation, and participation metrics, covering ages 15–64 annually. The money domain relies on EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) for income, poverty risk, and equivalised net income data, and the Structure of Earnings Survey (SES) for earnings disparities. Knowledge indicators use EU-LFS and Eurostat education statistics for attainment and segregation in fields of study. Time domain data stem from EIGE's Caring in Europe (CARE) Survey for care activities and social participation, addressing infrequent national time-use surveys.[1] Power metrics are aggregated from EIGE's database using administrative sources for representation in parliaments, boards, and institutions, often averaged over three years for stability. Health indicators derive from the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) for self-reported health, life expectancy, and access to care. The violence satellite incorporates prevalence data from the Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) survey and EIGE's administrative collections, with noted limitations in recency for some physical and sexual violence estimates dating to 2014.[1]Scoring Mechanism and Aggregation Process
The scoring mechanism of the Gender Equality Index calculates gender gaps for each of its indicators, which measure differences in outcomes between women and men across domains such as employment rates, earnings, and educational attainment. For a given indicator, the raw gender gap is determined using the formula |X_w - X_m| / (X_w + X_m), where X_w and X_m represent the values for women and men, respectively; this relative gap is then adjusted by a correcting coefficient derived from the maximum achievement level across EU member states to penalize low overall performance even if gaps are narrow.[16][8] The adjusted metric is subtracted from 1 and rescaled linearly to a 1-100 range, with 100 indicating no gap (full equality) and 1 representing maximum inequality.[16][8] Indicators, typically numbering 27 to 31 depending on the edition, are grouped into subdomains within the six core domains (Work, Money, Knowledge, Time, Power, and Health). Subdomain scores are aggregated via the geometric mean of their constituent indicators to reduce compensability, meaning strong performance in one indicator cannot fully offset weakness in another.[16][8] Domain scores are computed similarly as the geometric mean of their subdomains, ensuring that internal domain imbalances are reflected without full offset.[16][8] The overall index score is obtained as the unweighted arithmetic mean of the six core domain scores, treating each domain equally regardless of the number of indicators or subdomains it contains.[16][8] This aggregation method, selected after testing over 3,000 alternative scenarios including arithmetic and harmonic means via multi-modeling approaches aligned with OECD and Joint Research Centre guidelines, prioritizes robustness and limits full compensability across domains while allowing partial offsets.[16][8] Satellite domains like Violence are excluded from the core index aggregation due to data limitations and specificity.[16] Critics have noted that the geometric mean's partial compensability may still permit high scores in certain domains to inflate the overall index despite deficiencies elsewhere, potentially misrepresenting holistic equality.[4]Core Domains
Work
The Work domain evaluates gender disparities in labor market engagement, encompassing participation rates, occupational and sectoral segregation, and employment quality. It is structured around three subdomains—participation, segregation, and quality of work—utilizing five indicators derived primarily from Eurostat Labour Force Survey data for individuals aged 15 and over. Scores range from 0 to 100, with 100 indicating full equality; subdomain scores are equally weighted and averaged to yield the domain score, employing a gender gap methodology where equality is scored as 100 minus the absolute difference between male and female values (adjusted to percentage terms), or 100 minus the segregation index for relevant measures.[1][4] The participation subdomain, weighted at one-third of the domain, combines full-time equivalent (FTE) employment rates and labor market duration. FTE employment rate calculates the ratio of actual hours worked by women and men to full-time hours, revealing gaps where women often work fewer equivalent hours due to part-time arrangements; for the EU in 2021 data (underlying the 2024 index), this contributed to a subdomain score reflecting persistent differences. Duration of working life measures the average age of labor market exit, with women exiting earlier on average across EU states, influenced by factors such as pension eligibility and health; this indicator penalizes earlier female exits without distinguishing voluntary retirement from structural barriers.[17][15] Segregation subdomain assesses horizontal gender divides in occupations and sectors via dissimilarity indices, which quantify the proportion of workers who would need to change jobs for equal distribution (ranging 0-100, with scores transformed as 100 minus index value). Occupational segregation tracks distribution across ISCO categories, while sectoral segregation examines NACE divisions; EU-wide, women remain concentrated in lower-paid fields like health and education (over 75% female in some categories as of 2021), yielding subdomain scores around 60-70, indicating stalled progress since 2010 as preferences and educational choices sustain patterns rather than pure discrimination. This subdomain, also weighted one-third, highlights causal factors like self-selection into care-oriented roles, though the index treats deviations from parity as inequality without weighting economic outcomes.[18][19] Quality of work subdomain focuses on precarious employment, using part-time work prevalence (as percentage of total employment) and involuntary part-time rate (as share of part-time jobs). Women comprise about 30% of EU part-time workers versus 8% for men in 2021, with involuntary rates higher for women at around 20-25% in some states; scores approach equality when gaps narrow, but EU subdomain progress has been minimal (+0.2 points since 2018), as women's higher part-time uptake often aligns with caregiving demands rather than coercion. This subdomain assumes atypical work signals disadvantage, yet empirical data show many women prefer flexibility for family responsibilities, a distinction the methodology overlooks in favor of gap quantification.[17][20] The EU's Work domain score stood at 74.2 in the 2024 index (using mostly 2021-2022 data), up 0.4 points from 2021 but lagging other domains, with Sweden at 85.0 and Italy at 65.5; segregation and quality subdomains show near-zero gains over a decade, while participation improved modestly (+1.0 point). Critiques note the index's aggregation masks causal realities, such as biological and preference-driven differences in career choices—women's overrepresentation in people-oriented fields correlates with higher job satisfaction but lower pay—potentially overstating inequality by equating statistical gaps with systemic failure absent evidence of barriers.[1][21][4]Money
The Money domain assesses gender disparities in financial resources and overall economic circumstances, emphasizing their role in enabling financial independence and equitable partnerships. It captures differences in earnings, net income, poverty risks, and income distribution, drawing on data primarily from Eurostat's EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) survey and Structure of Earnings Survey for the year 2022.[22] This domain comprises two equally weighted sub-domains—Financial Resources (50%) and Economic Situation (50%)—each evaluated through two indicators with equal sub-domain weighting of 50%. The indicators are:| Sub-domain | Indicator | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Financial Resources | Mean monthly earnings from work (PPS) | Average earnings adjusted for purchasing power standards (PPS), focused on the working population. |
| Financial Resources | Mean equivalised net income (PPS) | Household net income per person (adjusted for size and composition), including pensions, investments, and benefits, for those aged 16 and over. |
| Economic Situation | Not-at-risk-of-poverty rate (AROP) | Proportion of population aged 16 and over not at risk, defined as income at or above 60% of national median equivalised disposable income. |
| Economic Situation | S80/S20 income quintile share ratio | Ratio of total equivalised disposable income received by the top 20% to the bottom 20% of earners aged 16 and over.[22] |
Knowledge
The Knowledge domain in the Gender Equality Index assesses disparities between women and men in educational outcomes and access to learning opportunities across the European Union. It focuses on three primary indicators: tertiary educational attainment among young adults, participation in lifelong learning among working-age adults, and gender segregation within fields of tertiary education. These metrics aim to capture both access to and distribution within educational systems, with scores calculated on a scale from 1 (complete inequality) to 100 (full equality).[24][25] The first indicator measures the percentage of individuals aged 30–34 who have attained at least upper secondary or tertiary education, highlighting gaps in foundational and advanced qualifications. In the EU, women consistently outperform men in this area, with 53.4% of women aged 30–34 holding tertiary degrees compared to 41.6% of men in 2022 data, resulting in high subdomain scores often exceeding 90 due to the narrow gap and female advantage. The second indicator tracks participation in education and training among those aged 25–64 over the previous four weeks, reflecting lifelong learning engagement; EU-wide, rates are similar between genders at around 11–12%, yielding subdomain scores near 100, though some countries like Romania show larger disparities favoring men. The third indicator, segregation in tertiary education, uses the Duncan index to quantify deviation from parity in enrollment across fields such as STEM, health, education, and humanities, where women are overrepresented in care-oriented disciplines (e.g., 80% of health and welfare students) and underrepresented in engineering (around 25%). This results in lower subdomain scores, typically 40–50 EU-wide, as the index treats occupational preferences as inequality rather than voluntary choices influenced by interests or labor market signals. The overall domain score is the geometric mean of these three subdomains, weighted equally, producing an EU average of 64.2 in the 2023 report, up from 61.5 in 2010, driven by attainment gains but stalled by persistent segregation.[24][4] Country variations reveal Sweden leading with 75.8 due to balanced participation and lower segregation, while Hungary trails at 55.1 from wider attainment gaps and field imbalances. Progress since 2010 averages 2.7 points EU-wide, attributed to policy expansions in adult education, though critics argue the segregation metric conflates equality of opportunity with enforced outcome parity, ignoring evidence from vocational psychology showing innate sex differences in field preferences that explain 10–20% of variance in career choices independent of socialization.[24][15][4]Time
The Time domain of the Gender Equality Index evaluates disparities in the distribution of time between women and men across unpaid care and domestic responsibilities and participation in social activities. It encompasses two sub-domains: care activities, which include daily engagement in childcare, adult care, and routine housework such as cooking and cleaning; and social activities, covering leisure pursuits like sports and cultural events, as well as voluntary or charitable work.[22] Indicators focus on participation rates rather than absolute hours, measuring the percentage of individuals aged 18–74 performing care or housework daily and the share of those aged 15–74 or workers aged 16–74 engaging in social activities weekly or monthly. Data primarily derive from the European Institute for Gender Equality's (EIGE) 2022 Care Activities in the EU (CARE) Survey, supplemented by the European Quality of Life Survey (EQLS) and European Working Conditions Survey (EWCS).[26][22] Scores in the Time domain are computed on a 0–100 scale, where 100 indicates no gender gap, using formulas that adjust for the absolute difference in participation rates or the female share relative to the gender average, benchmarked against maximum observed equality levels (e.g., 57.2 points for leisure participation and 35.5 for voluntary activities from 2005–2015 data). The EU's overall Time domain score stood at 68.5 points in the 2024 Index (based on 2022 data), unchanged from 2023 but reflecting a 3.3-point gain since 2010. Sub-domain scores were 78.7 for care activities (up 13.3 points since 2010) and 59.7 for social activities (down 5.3 points since 2010), highlighting uneven progress where reductions in care gaps have not fully translated to equivalent leisure access.[22][1] Empirical data reveal persistent gaps favoring men in time availability. In care activities, 33.5% of women performed daily unpaid care or housework compared to 24.6% of men, yielding an 8.9 percentage point disparity. For social activities, 28.6% of women participated weekly in leisure compared to 34.4% of men (a 5.8-point gap), with working women at 29% versus 34% for working men. Broader Harmonised European Time Use Surveys (HETUS) indicate women allocate substantially more total time to unpaid household and family care—approximately 3–4 hours daily on average versus lower for men—often 3.2 times more overall, constraining their social engagement due to cumulative demands.[22][27][28] Trends show incremental closure of care gaps since 2010, driven by policy shifts like expanded paternity leave in some member states, yet social activities remain stagnant or regressing for women, attributed to enduring stereotypes, time poverty from unpaid loads, and barriers like gender-based violence in recreational settings. Country variations are stark: Sweden scores highest at around 80 points, reflecting narrower gaps, while southern European nations like Greece have advanced rapidly (31.5 points since 2010) from low bases. Methodological reliance on participation metrics, rather than total hours, may understate intensity differences, as HETUS data confirm women shoulder disproportionate durations—e.g., over 2 hours more daily on unpaid work in many states—potentially linked to biological caregiving roles and household specialization rather than imposed inequality.[22][27][29]Power
The power domain evaluates gender disparities in high-level decision-making roles, emphasizing numerical representation of women relative to men in positions of influence across political, economic, and social spheres. Developed by the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), an EU agency tasked with promoting gender mainstreaming, this domain posits that equal shares in such roles indicate progress toward gender equality, though this approach has been critiqued for conflating outcomes with opportunities by overlooking individual preferences and biological variances in ambition or risk tolerance documented in psychological research.[30][4] The domain comprises three subdomains with specific indicators drawn primarily from official EU statistics and national data. Political power tracks the percentage of women in single/lower house parliaments and the percentage of women ministers (excluding deputies and junior ministers). Economic power includes the percentage of women CEOs in the largest listed companies (typically the top 20-50 by market capitalization per country), the percentage of women board members in those companies' supervisory or administrative boards, and the percentage of women board members in central banks. Social power measures the percentage of women on boards of major research funding organizations. These indicators capture snapshots from the most recent available years, often 2022 or 2023 data for the 2024 index.[15][30] Each indicator is scored using the formula $1 - \left| \frac{F - M}{F + M} \right|, where F and M represent female and male proportions, respectively, yielding values from 0 (complete segregation) to 1 (parity), then multiplied by 100 for the index scale. Subdomain scores average their indicators equally, and the overall power score averages the three subdomains, with no corrective adjustments applied unlike in some other domains. This aggregation assumes equal weight to each sphere of influence, despite economic roles often wielding greater resource control than social ones.[31][11] In the 2024 EIGE report, the EU aggregated power score stands at 61.4 points, the lowest among core domains, reflecting persistent gaps such as only 33% women in parliaments, 6% women CEOs in large firms, and around 20-30% women on economic boards despite quota interventions in some member states. Scores have risen 11.6 points since the index's 2010 baseline (from 49.8), driven by political gains, but economic power lags at approximately 50 points EU-wide, attributable to factors like women's lower pursuit of STEM fields and longer tenures in high-stakes roles favoring male-typical traits per labor economics studies. Country variations are stark, with Sweden at 78.5 points versus Hungary at 45.2, correlating loosely with cultural norms on family roles rather than purely legal barriers.[3][15][4]Health
The Health domain of the Gender Equality Index evaluates disparities between women and men in health outcomes and behaviors, structured around three subdomains: health status, health behaviour, and access to health services.[32] Health status examines gaps in life expectancy at birth, self-perceived general health, and healthy life years (disability-free expectancy), with indicators derived primarily from Eurostat data.[33] For instance, in the EU, women's life expectancy averaged 83.4 years compared to 78.0 years for men as of 2021 data underlying recent indices, reflecting a persistent gap of about 5.4 years favoring women, attributed in part to biological factors such as lower cardiovascular disease rates in pre-menopausal women and men's higher exposure to occupational risks and behaviors like smoking.[34] Self-perceived health shows smaller differences, with roughly equal proportions of women and men rating their health as good or very good (around 70-75% in EU aggregates), while healthy life years gaps have narrowed slightly from 1.5 years in 2010 to about 0.9 years by 2021, driven by improvements in men's longevity.[15] Health behaviour assesses differences in modifiable risk factors, primarily the proportion of daily smokers aged 15 and over, with supplementary data on blood pressure screening and physical activity where available; men's smoking prevalence has historically exceeded women's by 5-10 percentage points in most EU states (e.g., 24% for men vs. 18% for women in 2021 EU averages), contributing to higher male mortality from tobacco-related diseases, though female rates have stagnated in some regions amid rising vaping trends.[35] This subdomain highlights behavioral gaps but overlooks causal factors like men's greater participation in hazardous occupations or cultural norms discouraging women's smoking historically, which the index aggregates without disaggregating biological versus societal influences.[4] Access to health services measures unmet medical or dental care needs due to cost, distance, or waiting times, alongside women's participation in breast and cervical cancer screening; EU-wide, unmet needs affect about 2-3% of the population similarly across sexes, but women report slightly higher rates (3.5% vs. 2.5% for men in 2022), potentially linked to caregiving burdens reducing time for preventive care, while screening uptake for women averages 60-70% for mammography but varies by country (e.g., 85% in Finland vs. 40% in Romania).[33] The EU's Health domain score stood at 88.6 out of 100 in assessments up to 2023, the highest among core domains, indicating relatively small gender gaps compared to areas like power (score ~55), though progress has been minimal since 2010 (only 0.5-point gain), with stagnation in health behaviour data post-2014 due to survey limitations.[36] Critics note that framing biological longevity advantages for women as "inequality" may conflate natural sex differences with policy failures, as men's shorter expectancy correlates more with preventable external causes (e.g., 70% of excess male deaths from injuries and substances) than access barriers.[4][37]| Subdomain | Key Indicators | EU Gender Gap Example (Recent Data) | Score Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health Status | Life expectancy, self-perceived health, healthy life years | Women: +5.4 years expectancy; similar self-perceived health | High (near 90/100) due to consistent measurement but persistent biological/behavioral gaps |
| Health Behaviour | Daily smoking rates, preventive checks | Men: 24% smokers vs. women 18%; men lower screening uptake | Moderate, reflecting larger behavioral disparities |
| Access to Services | Unmet needs, cancer screening participation | Women: 3.5% unmet vs. men 2.5%; 60-70% screening for women | High, small overall gaps but women's higher unmet needs from time constraints |
Satellite Domains
Violence
The Violence domain assesses the prevalence and severity of physical and sexual violence experienced by women, primarily drawing from self-reported survey data rather than comparative gender gaps, which positions it as a satellite domain excluded from the core Gender Equality Index score. This approach reflects data limitations and conceptual focus on absolute levels of harm to women, as comparable bidirectional violence metrics for men are not incorporated. Indicators center on women aged 15 and older who report physical and/or sexual assault since age 15, distinguishing intimate partner violence (e.g., from current or former spouses/partners) and non-partner violence (e.g., sexual assault by strangers or acquaintances). Data primarily stem from the 2014 European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) survey across EU member states, supplemented by national victimizations surveys where available, with prevalence rates typically ranging from 20-35% for lifetime exposure to partner violence EU-wide.[38] Severity sub-indicators quantify impacts such as injuries necessitating medical treatment, ongoing fear of the perpetrator, or symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder following assaults. For instance, the FRA survey found that around 13% of women experiencing partner violence reported severe injuries, while underreporting to authorities affects 67-90% of cases, depending on the violence type and country. The domain's composite score aggregates these via geometric means, transforming raw prevalence (e.g., 30% exposure yields a low score near 0-20) and severity metrics to a 0-100 scale where 100 denotes zero violence—yielding an EU aggregate of 31.9 points in the 2024 report, with prevalence at 18.2 and severity at 44.0, signaling persistent high exposure levels little changed since 2012 benchmarks. Country variations show Sweden and Denmark scoring above 50 due to higher survey disclosure rates, while Romania and Bulgaria lag below 20, often tied to cultural underreporting rather than incidence alone.[38][15] Methodological critiques highlight that the domain's unidirectional focus on female victims deviates from equality measurement principles, as it omits male victimization rates—empirical studies indicate men comprise 20-40% of intimate partner violence reporters in bidirectional surveys using conflict tactics scales, though women face higher sexual violence risks and severe injury odds due to average physical disparities. Self-report biases, including telescoping (misrecalled timing) and social desirability, further challenge comparability, with FRA data showing 14% non-response rates potentially skewing toward underestimation. Administrative data gaps, such as police records capturing only 10-20% of incidents, compound reliability issues, prompting calls for gender-neutral metrics to align with causal patterns where male-perpetrated violence predominates in lethality but mutual aggression occurs in milder forms.[4][13]Intersecting Inequalities
The intersecting inequalities domain of the Gender Equality Index examines how gender disparities interact with other social characteristics to produce varied outcomes across the core domains of work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health. This analysis disaggregates data to reveal compounded effects, such as lower labor market participation among women facing multiple disadvantages, drawing on empirical evidence from EU-wide surveys. Introduced in the index's methodology from 2017 onward, it prioritizes measurable intersections supported by available data, including disability, age, educational attainment, country of birth (as a proxy for migrant background), and family type.[39] Key indicators focus on outcomes like employment rates, earnings, educational attainment, and time use, segmented by gender and intersecting factors using data from sources such as the EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC). For instance, women with disabilities exhibit employment rates of approximately 49% (ages 20-64), compared to 53.9% for men with disabilities, widening the overall gender employment gap when disability intersects with gender due to barriers like inaccessible workplaces and caregiving demands disproportionately affecting women. Migrant women, identified by non-EU country of birth, face heightened inequalities in money and work domains, with poverty risks 2-3 times higher than native-born women in several member states, linked to lower wages and precarious employment.[1][40][39] Age intersects with gender to exacerbate time and health disparities; older women (aged 65+) spend over 20% more time on unpaid care work than older men, contributing to pension gaps of up to 30% in some countries, as lifetime earnings are reduced by interrupted careers. Low educational attainment compounds gender gaps in knowledge and work, with women holding low qualifications showing full-time equivalent employment rates as low as 24% in certain contexts like Germany. Family type analysis reveals single mothers with children under 18 experiencing 15-20 percentage point lower employment rates than coupled parents, reflecting childcare burdens and limited support systems. These patterns hold across EU aggregates but vary by country, with Nordic states showing narrower gaps due to policy interventions like subsidized care.[41][42][39] Data limitations constrain comprehensive coverage; ethnicity and sexual orientation intersections are underrepresented due to inconsistent EU-level collection, relying instead on proxies or national data, which may understate certain vulnerabilities. While the approach uses regression-adjusted indicators to isolate effects, causal inferences remain tentative without longitudinal tracking, and selection of intersections prioritizes data availability over theoretical completeness, potentially overlooking rural-urban divides or socioeconomic class nuances evident in finer-grained studies. Empirical disaggregation thus highlights targeted disadvantages but underscores the need for improved harmonized data to verify intersectional claims beyond aggregate gender binaries.[39]Results and Trends
Historical Progress and EU Aggregate Scores
The Gender Equality Index was first published by the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) in 2010, establishing a baseline EU aggregate score of 63.1 points out of 100, reflecting disparities across domains such as work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health.[1] By the 2024 edition, which incorporates data primarily from 2022, the EU score reached 71.0 points, marking a total improvement of 7.9 points over the 14-year period—an average annual gain of approximately 0.56 points.[1] This progress indicates gradual narrowing of gender gaps, driven by advancements in areas like economic participation and decision-making, though the overall pace remains modest and uneven.[34] Recent iterations show incremental advancements amid methodological refinements for comparability since 2010. The 2023 score stood at 70.2 points, followed by a 0.8-point increase to 71.0 in 2024, with gains concentrated in power (up 2.3 points since 2021) and money (up 0.8 points).[43] Earlier reports, such as the 2022 edition, recorded a 5.5-point rise from the 2010 baseline, underscoring a trajectory of slow but consistent upward movement until external pressures like economic and geopolitical crises began to temper momentum.[44] Convergence analysis reveals that while EU-wide disparities have diminished, with member states' scores drawing closer to the average, the absolute distance to full equality (100 points) persists, highlighting structural barriers not fully addressed by policy interventions.[3]| Year (Report Edition) | EU Aggregate Score | Change from 2010 |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 63.1 | Baseline |
| 2022 | 68.6 | +5.5 points |
| 2023 | 70.2 | +7.1 points |
| 2024 | 71.0 | +7.9 points |
Country-Level Rankings and Variations
In the 2024 Gender Equality Index, Sweden attained the highest overall score of 82 out of 100, reflecting strong performance across multiple domains including work and knowledge, while Romania scored the lowest at 57.5, primarily due to deficits in power and money.[46] Denmark secured second place, followed by the Netherlands at 78.8, positioning these Nordic and northwestern countries as consistent leaders in metrics such as labor participation and political decision-making.[47] The European Union average of 71.0 underscores a collective shortfall from full equality, with scores derived from data predominantly collected in 2022 across six core domains: work, money, knowledge, time, power, and health. Country rankings exhibit pronounced regional patterns, with northern member states outperforming southern and eastern counterparts; for example, Italy's overall score lags notably in economic domains, scoring 65.5 in work compared to Sweden's leading 85.0.[21] Such variations highlight domain-specific imbalances: France excels in social power at 86.6 points, driven by higher female representation in media and culture, whereas Estonia scores a mere 16.9 in the same sub-domain, indicating underrepresentation in cultural leadership roles.[15] Portugal stands out as the sole country experiencing a decline in workplace equality, attributed to widening participation gaps amid economic pressures post-2022.[48]| Rank | Country | Score (out of 100) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sweden | 82.0 |
| 2 | Denmark | ~79-80 (implied) |
| 3 | Netherlands | 78.8 |
| ... | EU Average | 71.0 |
| Lowest | Romania | 57.5 |