On this year*s Women*s Day, a host of Chinese media outlets are trumpeting a new study that finds China*s businesses rank the highest in the world for employing women in senior management roles.
The proportion of women in senior management in China has climbed to 51% this year, up from 25% in 2012 and outpacing the global average of 21%, according to the study, produced by the Beijing arm of accounting firm Grant Thornton. In a survey of 200 businesses in China, 94% of them employed women in senior roles, the study said.
outpacing:超过,赶过
The survey*s findings would seem to represent great news for women in a country with a long history of entrenched patriarchy except they conflict significantly with other studies that show Chinese women have actually been losing ground in the labor force, politics and society.
entrenched:确立,确保,根深蒂固的,稳固的 patriarchy:父权制,父系社会
One recent study by National University of Singapore*s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and the New York-based Asia Society, for every five Chinese men who rises to a senior position in the workplace only one woman achieves the same level of advancement. The ratio is even more lopsided inside the Communist Party: In the party*s Central Committee, where major policy decisions are discussed, only 10 of the 205 members are women, and no woman has ever held a spot on the Politburo Standing Committee, the party*s top decision-making body.
lopsided:不平衡的,倾向一方的
Things are slightly better in the country*s rubber-stamp parliament, the National People*s Congress, where 23% of the 2,987 delegates are female.
In the World Economic Forum*s gender equality index, an annual ranking of countries by their ability to develop, retain and attract female talent, China*s ranking declined to 69th last year, down from 57th in 2008.
gender equality:男女平等
State-controlled media and economic restructuring have actually added pressure for women to settle down at home, said Leta Hong Fincher, a doctoral candidate at Tsinghua University in Beijing who studies gender and wealth equality in China. She cites the legacy of the restructuring of China*s massive state-owned companies in previous decades, which that led to millions of job cuts that took a hefty toll on employed women.
legacy:遗赠,遗产 job cuts:裁员 a hefty toll:高昂代价
In a 2010 survey of women*s social status in China by the All-China Women*s Federation, the Chinese government*s women*s advocacy organization, 61.6% of men and 54.6% of women said that ※men belong in public life and women belong at home,§ an increase of 7.7 and 4.4 percentage points respectively from 2000.
advocacy:主张,拥护,辩护
※There*s an increase in the number of people who believe women should be in the home,§ Ms. Fincher said. ※That*s unusual. In most other societies you see more progression.§
Around one-third of the businesses surveyed by Grant Thornton were state owned and public businesses, while one third were privately owned and the other third were foreign-funded.
Grant Thornton concedes that females still face obstacles in China*s business world. ※ Women still lack equal opportunities with men in various career opportunities,§ said Xu Hua, Grant Thornton*s China CEO.