April 18, 2012
Elaine Kurtenbach
Associated Press
Shanghai. The 2 billion women living in Asia are still
paid less than men for similar work and are underrepresented in top
leadership positions, according to a report issued on Wednesday.
The Asia Society survey on women’s status in health, education,
economic activity and political leadership urges improvements to ensure
the region benefits fully from its underused pool of human talent.
While women’s status varies widely from country to country, overall,
“to continue in this direction would put in peril Asia’s many
achievements,” said the report, compiled by Astrid S. Tuminez of the Lee
Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore.
Limits on female employment cost the region $89 billion a year in
terms of lost productivity and human resources, the report said, citing
United Nations data.
Overall, based on various measures, the gender gap was narrowest and
women’s leadership strongest in New Zealand, Australia, the Philippines,
Sri Lanka and Mongolia. The gap was widest in Pakistan, Nepal, India,
South Korea and Cambodia.
“Some economies in Asia with the highest human development rankings
also perform most poorly in some measures of women’s leadership,” it
said, referring to Japan and South Korea.
Asia leads the world in terms of the number of years women have
governed as heads of state and currently has four women leaders. But the
report attributes that to dynastic traditions calling for women to take
over from fathers, husbands or sons when they die, are imprisoned or
killed.
It said the problem began before birth, with sex-selective abortions
and infanticide due to a preference for sons in countries such as China
and India.
It said the bias in favor of sons meant that girls in some countries
received poorer medical care, nutrition and education than boys,
especially in developing countries.
The discrepancy in schooling leaves the majority of women in four
Asian nations illiterate, the report said, citing literacy rates of 10
percent in Bhutan, 16 percent in Pakistan, 25 percent in Nepal and 31
percent in Bangladesh. Although women live longer in Asian nations, such
disadvantages affect health and earning power over a lifetime, the
report noted.
“From the start, girls in Asia face significant obstacles to
fulfilling their human potential, in general, and their potential for
leadership, in particular,” Asia Society President Vishakha N. Desai
said in introducing the report.
Pay gaps remain significant, the report said, with the ratio of
women’s pay to men’s lowest in South Korea, at 51 percent, below that of
Nepal, Bangladesh and China. Japan’s was not much better, at 60
percent.
The narrowest gaps, the report found, were in Malaysia and Singapore,
at 81 percent, and Mongolia and Thailand, at just under 80 percent.
Globally, women’s pay is 20 percent to 30 percent less than men’s, on
average.
As far as women in senior corporate positions, Japan came in worst in
the region with just 5 percent of those positions held by women.
Thailand and the Philippines ranked highest, with women holding 39
percent of senior level positions, while India came in at 14 percent and
China 25 percent, it said, citing a survey by human resources
consultancy Grant Thornton International.
The percentage of women on corporate boards was much lower, with
Japan at 0.9 percent, South Korea at 1.9 percent and China at 8.5
percent. New Zealand ranked highest, at 9.3 percent. The global average
is 21 percent, down from 24 percent in 2009, the report said.
The report suggests specific remedies, such as providing more
mentoring, more generous parental leaves, childcare and elder care,
while gender-equal retirement packages would encourage women to continue
their careers to top management positions.
But more fundamentally, it urges greater education aimed at valuing
girls and women on a par with boys and men, steps to end sex selective
abortions and improvement in women’s property rights and other
protections to ensure they can contribute fully to society.
No comments:
Post a Comment