Cars for girls, dolls for boys and no more pink and blue: for Spain’s left-wing government and the toy industry, it’s game over for gender stereotypes when it comes to the country’s youngest citizens.
Since December 1, a code of ethics has been in place encouraging toy shops and manufacturers to “avoid gender bias” when marketing toys, in guidelines agreed with the consumer affairs ministry.
Toy Planet, a Spanish chain based near the eastern resort of Valencia, has been following this strategy for the past decade in adverts for its own-brand toys.
Flicking through its catalogue, one image shows a girl with a toy gun wearing a police vest, another shows a girl hitting a punchbag, while another portrays a boy pushing a pram.
“Toys play a very important role in what sort of adults we become. So let’s not be the ones to create prejudice from such an early age,” said Toy Planet’s director Ignacio Gaspar.
“It’s important if we want to see a future in which a boy could become a midwife or a girl could become a mechanic.”
What drove the change back in 2012 was the realisation that Toy Planet was coming under fire on social media for its unimaginative publicity.
“We started using images that were the opposite: boys playing with dolls, girls using tool benches,” Gaspar said.
But the switch wasn’t easy.
“People said it would make boys more effeminate or turn girls into tomboys,” he said.
Out with the pink and blue
A pioneer in feminist initiatives, the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has pushed through several schemes to tackle gender-based violence as well as advancing equality and women’s rights.
Under the new code of ethics, advertisements can no longer say a toy is for a particular gender, or designate pink for girls and blue for boys, which is deemed to reinforce outdated gender roles.
Signed by the Spanish Association of Toy Manufacturers (AEFJ), which represents 90 per cent of the industry in Spain, it took a year to draw up, said Rafael Escudero of the consumer affairs ministry.
But its scope remains limited since it does not affect packaging, street advertising or toy shop catalogues, Escudero added.
There are no sanctions for those who fail to comply, who only run a “reputational risk”, and major international brands are not affected.
“It’s obviously not enough but it’s necessary if we want to move forwards,” said Escudero.
On Gran Via, Madrid’s main shopping street where people are out Christmas shopping, Julio Cesar Araujo, 62, has a clear idea of what to buy his grandchildren.
“For the girls, it’s dolls and things like that,” he says, then adds: “But if you have a girl who wants to play with cars, you’ll buy her a car. If she wants to play with boys’ toys, she can.”
‘An educational responsibility’
Nathalie Rodriguez, 48, owner of Kamchatka which sells “educational, non-sexist, environmentally-friendly and non-violent toys”, believes toy sellers have “an educational responsibility”.
“Toys themselves aren’t sexist, but it’s the way they are perceived by the adults that design and make them, who sell and market them,” Rodriguez explains.
“A catalogue with a picture of a boy wearing a baby sling is what we’re aiming for.”
Rodriguez says that with some customers, she will “gently try to break down silly ideas”.
“When a grandfather says he doesn’t want a cooker because he’s buying for a boy, you tell him it makes no sense in a country with the highest number of internationally-recognised chefs,” she says.
Tania San Jose, a 41-year-old mother and teacher from the northern town of Pamplona, thinks it’s about time the government stepped in with some rules.
“Unfortunately, there are still toys for boys and toys for girls but in our generation, we’re trying to change that,” she says.
Angela Munoz, 47, believes society has evolved a lot already.
“I could buy a doll for my son so he could have the chance to play like the girls do,” she said.
“That way both sexes have the same opportunities to play.”