On the international Women's Day morning, Li Na, a
Beijing career woman, drove to her office in the capital's CBD,
ignoring greeting messages from her friends.
Li, 29, a section manager, distinguished herself from
male competitors. She has been married for three years, but has no
children due to the pressures of work.
According to a report released by the State Council,
women account for 45 percent of the total workforce in
China.
Commonly referred to as "half of the sky" after Mao
Zedong's saying that "Women can hold up half the sky", women are
entering many high-tech or knowledge-intensive industries like
computer software, communications and finance.
Li considers herself lucky to have her position her
own endeavors in a foreign company as many women have come up
against discrimination or inequity at the first step to their
careers.
Gender Discrimination in Employment
"Gender equality has been widely talked about,"
complains Yu Lan, a Shanghai job-hunter, "but we women still feel a
wordless embarrassment when we talk to employers."
Yu came back to Shanghai shortly after the Spring
Festival, giving up three days of her family get-together only to
find a cold reception from a prospective employer in Xujiahui in
the south of Shanghai.
"They were concerned about my age," 26-year-old Yu
says. "They worried that I'd probably get married and pregnant
shortly after starting work, although they superficially claimed
that gender was not an issue."
A survey conducted in seven universities in central
China's Henan Province showed almost 80 percent of the students
believe the inequality in employment opportunities was the worst
gender problem today.
Zhang Liren, vice secretary-general of the social
gender research center, Zhengzhou University in Henan, said the
dissatisfaction over employment inequity reflected the
reality.
In China, no employer will set targets for women
employees, and some openly reject female applicants. Female
university graduates face higher pressures than male graduates in
finding a job.
Influenced by Confucianism, unjust gender conceptions
like "Man is superior to woman" and "Marry a dog, live with a dog"
have dominated thinking for thousands of years in China.
Women only featured on the social stage after the
People's Republic of China was founded in 1949, when they were
"liberated" from oppression and humiliation.
However, modern women are choosing to come out of the
family and compete with men mostly as a result of living
pressures.
"I don't want to fight with men for jobs if my husband
can afford all mortgage and other expenses," Li Na said.
Yu Lan disagreed with Li, saying a woman should be
financially independent and make her own preparations for later
life.
Yu's concern is rational. According to a report from
the China Association for the Aged, one third of the urban poor are
over 50, most of them women.
Back to family, a new trend?
However, a group of well-educated women who choose to
live more traditional roles is emerging in China.
Some choose to do a job of love -- such as school
teachers -- rather than a job with a high salary. Some even choose
to be full-time housewives.
Zhou Xiaobai graduated from a university in southwest
China's Sichuan Province. She married a university
classmate after graduation and became a housewife.
"No matter what you choose, career woman or housewife,
the key point here is to allow me to make my own choice," Zhou
said. "Women should be treated equally without social
discrimination and prejudice."
In well-off provinces such as Guangdong, more women
are comfortable being housewives than in comparatively poor
provinces.
A survey in Guangdong showed more than 40 percent of
women want to be a housewife if the family's finances
allow.
Professor Pan Yunkang, of China's Marriage and Family
Research Institute, said, "The differences between woman and man
exist from birth. Respect the differences, physical and mental, and
give women the right to choose their own lifestyle, then gender
equality can be realized."
(Xinhua News Agency March 9, 2007)
|