Household Heads Gender Comparison of Perceived Causes of Poverty in a South African Township

Type Journal Article - Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences
Title Household Heads Gender Comparison of Perceived Causes of Poverty in a South African Township
Author(s)
Volume 5
Issue 21
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 299-304
URL http://www.mcser.org/journal/index.php/mjss/article/viewFile/4203/4113
Abstract
This study compared perceptions of the causes of poverty among female and male households’ heads in a South African
township. A survey questionnaire was used with a sample of 225 households 156 headed by males and 69 headed by females,
randomly selected from Kwakwatsi Township. Instrument used to measure perceptions of the causes of poverty was drawn
from The Perceptions of the Causes of Poverty Scale (PCPS) developed by Joe Feagin. In general, the analysis showed that
the larger number of Kwakwatsi population was inclined to attribute poverty to individualistic factors, compared to structural and
fatalistic factors. Independent t-test indicated that female and male household’s heads expressed similar within the structural
and individualistic explanations of the causes of poverty, but they differed significantly in the importance they attributed to the
fatalistic attributions. Males reported a higher significant level of inclination to the fatalistic causes of poverty than females. This
study confirmed that the link between the perception of causes of poverty and gender cannot be generalised.

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