The boundaries between products typically purchased by women and men are crumbling, according to one online retailer’s statistics reported Tuesday.



The phenomenon is a reflection of changing attitudes toward gender-assigned roles, experts said.



A growing number of men are buying items such as vacuum cleaners, traditionally seen as household goods purchased by women, according to 11st, a local report said.



From January to March, some 45 percent of those who purchased robot vacuum cleaners on 11st were men in their 30s, while only 35 percent of buyers were women in their 40s, according to the report.



Men in their 30s also accounted for the highest percentage of consumers who purchased mini washing machines on 11st in the same period, at 25 percent.



Meanwhile, women in their 30s constituted the largest group to purchase action figures and other toy models, making up 33 percent of buyers over the past two months on 11st. Women in their 30s were also the top group for remote-control toys, constituting 27 percent of sales.





(123rf)