15 January 2015 | 10:49

Majority in US expect a woman president in their lifetime: poll

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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. ©REUTERS Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. ©REUTERS

 Seventy-three percent of Americans expect to see a female president in their lifetime, even as men are expected to maintain their dominant role in business, a survey published Wednesday said, AFP reports.

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 Seventy-three percent of Americans expect to see a female president in their lifetime, even as men are expected to maintain their dominant role in business, a survey published Wednesday said, AFP reports.

The Washington-based Pew Research Center interviewed 1,835 adults online in November to get a sense of how Americans view women and leadership today.

Most respondents felt there was no difference between men and women when it came to leadership qualities like intelligence and capacity for innovation.

But when asked to explain the shortage of female political leaders, 28 percent of men and 47 percent of women said women were being held to higher standards than men.

In the business realm, the proportion who said women were judged more harshly than their male counterparts was even higher: a third of men and just over half of women.

That said, nearly three-quarters of those polled said they thought the United States would elect a female president in their lifetime. Just one in five respondents disagreed.

Women who support the Democratic party were the most enthusiastic about a woman in the White House -- amid speculation that Hillary Clinton might run again for president in 2016.

In the business world, however, 52 percent of men and 55 percent of women expected men to continue to hold more top business positions in the future, even as more women move into management.

The survey also found that Americans are divided over whether a woman with leadership aspirations is better off having children early on in her career (36 percent) or waiting until she is well established (40 percent).

"About one-in-five (22 percent) say the best option would be to not have children at all," said Pew, which posted the full survey on its www.pewresearch.org website.

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