Money and marital bliss rank highest on the list of what the
modern Kenyan woman desires, according to a new study by Consumer
Insight.
The study, which set out to understand women’s
lifestyles, values and aspirations, shows that the modern Kenyan
woman’s ideal life is one in which she has a good job, a good house, a
good education and a compatible partner.
Asked what
they considered the most important thing, 27 per cent of the respondents
said “a comfortable life”, followed by 13 per cent who ranked “world at
peace” as the most important.
Accomplishment, health,
career and happiness followed in that order at 9,8,7 and 6 per cent.
Four per cent said living an exciting life was most important while an
equal number said family was the most important.
On
their dreams and aspirations, 41 per cent of married women and 33 per
cent of single women said they wanted to own a house. However, having a
job was a major aspiration for single women (48 per cent) compared to
their married counterparts (22 per cent). Owning their own business was a
big dream for 25 per cent of both the married and single women.
Of
the married women, 29 per cent said they valued a successful marriage
and raising their children well. On the other hand, single women (27 per
cent) said they valued higher education, while another 20 per cent said
they valued owning a car.
Interestingly, modern Kenyan
women fear death and poverty more than life threatening diseases,
violence, rape, joblessness, divorce, losing children and childlessness.
According to the survey, HIV/Aids is no longer considered a deadly
disease, especially among Nairobi women.
The
researchers attributed this finding to reduced stigma in the capital and
the knowledge that one can still live long with HIV if they take good
care of themselves.
Of the 1,304 women interviewed, 51
per cent said they feared death the most. The fear of death was higher
in other towns (58 per cent) but lower among women in Nairobi (42 per
cent).
HIV
HIV was
rated second among the things women fear most (43 per cent) followed by
poverty (35 per cent) and life threatening illnesses (30 per cent).
Women from Nairobi fear poverty and life-threatening illnesses more than
their counterparts in other towns.
The research
manager for the survey, Ms Ruth Ruigu, said it was the country’s most
comprehensive study on women to date, covering all aspects of women’s
lives, including finances, media use, shopping behaviour and lifestyle
choices.
The study, conducted with the help of gender
experts, including Dr Besi Muhonja, an associate professor in women’s
and gender studies at James Madison University in the US, was aimed at
helping organisations and the society in general to reach a better
understanding of the Kenyan woman. It also measured their loyalty to
various consumer brands, from mobile phones to household goods.
For
instance, it found that while 54 per cent of women desired to own a
Samsung smart phone, only 24 per cent actually had one and while 37 per
cent owned a Nokia, another 32 per cent wanted one. Only one per cent
owned an iPhone although 19 per cent said they would love to have one.
The
various themes of the study were generated from interviews with experts
and focus group discussions. The findings were later tested through a
quantitative study via face-to-face interviews with 1,304 women in
Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Eldoret and Nyeri.
On
lifestyle, the study found that a church wedding was a dream for many,
with 72 per cent saying they wanted to walk down the aisle. However,
only a small fraction ever live that dream, with a majority ending up in
come-we-stay arrangements and customary marriages. A pragmatic few —
about 10 per cent of women surveyed — desired a civil wedding, and
exactly the same number got one.
Interestingly, about
20 per cent of the respondents said it would be ‘OK’ for a woman to
propose marriage to a man, an attitude considered to be more
cosmopolitan.
And although a majority of women dreamed
of wedded bliss, the study found that one in three married women (33 per
cent) actually do not live with their husbands.
The
study also found that the modern Kenyan woman is guilty of impulse
shopping, particularly for clothes, shoes and bags. Most of impulse
buyers do so to indulge themselves. More than 60 per cent confessed to
buying clothes at least once a month, with eight per cent saying they
buy clothes at least every week. A large number of them — more than
three quarters — shop in second-hand markets.
EARNED PERSONAL INCOME
On
hair care, braids and weaves were most popular, with a majority
preferring to braid their hair. More than 60 per cent of hair-care
expenditure is spent on artificial hair. Despite this, close to 90 per
cent of the respondents said that beauty comes from the inside and is
grounded in values and self-belief, not outward displays.
“A majority of women surveyed said they earned a personal income,” the study says.
For married women, business and employment are vital sources of income.
The
study also showed that older women, above 30 and mostly married, were
higher users of TV and radio, while their younger counterparts preferred
the Internet.
Remarkably, far fewer young women use
email, suggesting that social media like WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook,
Twitter and others, may be the future of online communication and
entertainment.
Young and older Kenyan women share a belief that life is moving too fast. They want to slow down.
“For
them, home is a retreat and refuge from the busy world. A place they
can go to slow down; whether it means watching ‘series’ DVDs all day or
simply sleeping, all weekend,” the study reports.
Nairobi
women also yearn for aspects of traditional life — respect for elders,
togetherness, children playing together in the neighbourhood, close-knit
extended families, preserving virginity until marriage, older people
telling stories, children being disciplined by the whole community,
among others.
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