Why can’t women find a man? Could it be because potential men are too busy writing reports about why women can’t find men?

A street in the old center of BudapestPhoto: Cavan Images / Alamy / Profimedia Images

This is stated in a recent press release of the Hungarian State Audit Office. This acute dilemma has led them to sound the alarm about “pink education” — that is, the fact that women enroll in college or make up the majority of pre-university teachers — a “phenomenon” that they fear has “numerous economic and social consequences,” the report said. The Telegraph quoted by Rador.

And as soon as he starts stringing them, then even more widely. Among their main problems is that due to the large number of female students, it will be difficult for them to find men of the same intellectual level, hence the “declining birth rate”.

Another is that the high proportion of women in pre-university teachers (82%) will cause boys to lose some traditional skills, such as fixing sinks, because education “favors female traits such as emotional and social maturity”.

Such skills are “necessary for the optimal development of the economy” — and without them, the boys risk getting “mental and behavioral problems.”

Of all the things women can be accused of, educating themselves or the nation’s children seems like an inappropriate choice. Especially when the same study, based on data collected from 700 parents and teachers, concluded that female characteristics are considered more favorable in education.

And yet Ofis selflessly pushes them forward: although he admits that the girls proved more diligent, “anyone who has seen a boy juggle a soccer ball knows that men are capable of completing tasks with a very high level of concentration.”

Take Hungary’s student population, of which 54.5% are women, but the percentage rises to 60% for graduates as more men drop out. Blaming women for “gender inequality” because their peers don’t want to go to class doesn’t seem fair, but it’s still one of many things they’re guilty of, the report said.

Likewise, the fact that many of them are teachers. Why don’t women stop helping others and giving men a chance in this notoriously competitive field?

If fewer women became teachers, then surely more men would become teachers, and the country would not sink even deeper into the teacher shortage it now faces.

The auditor’s office has succeeded in what could be seen as its main aim, which is to support Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s “conservative revolution” – a revolution that now rewards couples who promise to have three children with a house bonus of £28,000 sterling