This normative structure gives the location on the top of the gender hierarchy to a boy or a man who supposedly possesses these properties and shares these values.
Kon considers hegemonic masculinity not a property of a certain male, but a specified sociocultural normative canon, to which men and boys are geared [3].
The deciding question here is; is the increase in gender equality and the improvement in family values more important than larger corporate profits? According to a graphical scree-plot analysis, a one-factor solution was confirmed.