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Women's Congress Aims to Close Income Gap, Lift Status

China Daily, October 29, 2013 Adjust font size:

Bias in the workplace

Wang Ling, 26, who holds a master's degree, said she is lucky to have gotten her dream job in a wind power company in Shanghai, but she is assigned to do "less important and supportive work" as her boss is worried she can't handle many business trips.

Some of her male classmates have been offered jobs in key posts at the same company.

In 2009, the Center for Women's Law and Legal Services at Peking University surveyed 3,000 women over a year and found that 25 percent of women were denied a job simply because they are female.

A human resources worker at a State-owned company surnamed Shen, and who refused to disclose her full name, told China Daily that her employer would, without any doubt, choose a male candidate over an equally qualified female candidate. Moreover, they are willing to lower their standards in order to hire more men.

"I know that women are, more often than not, more capable than men; but they can only work for about five years before they get pregnant," she said.

"We need more stable labor forces. It sounds cruel, but that's the reality. I am a female as well, and I empathize a lot with the girls, but biology determines everything, and there is not much I can help with."

The survey also found that more than 15 percent of the women interviewed said that their income is lower than their male colleagues who do the same work, and 11 percent lost their jobs during pregnancy or after their babies were born.

Chen Shujuan, a consultant with a private company in Beijing, experienced several miscarriages before she got pregnant this year in February. For health reasons, she had to ask for a longer maternity leave of 14 weeks. However, when she asked her boss, he told her she was too weak to handle the work and not to come back.

Zhang Yuling, a technical writer with a US software company based in Wudaokou in Beijing expressed her frustration as a working mother.

"I'm an employee, but also a daughter, a wife and a mother. Everyday, I'm busy fulfilling my different roles, responding to different tasks, both at work and at home," she said. "I never really have time for myself."

The 36-year-old businesswoman said that currently, she felt stuck in her career path. "The future seems bleak," she said.

Building a network

Inspired by Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg's book, Lean In: Women, Work and the Will to Lead, a group of female professionals in Beijing are organizing regular seminars and networking events to help other women in the workforce learn new skills and encourage self-growth.

One of the organizers Charlotte Han, 25, said that the meetings are an effective way to acquire social resources as participants are all open, sharing and helpful.

"It helps me to see things out of the box. It is a support network outside of the workplace and family," she said. "I also have access to a career mentor."

The All-China Women's Federation has been advocating the economic development of women for more than 60 years.

According to Song, in the last five years, the federation has lobbied the government to give an interest subsidy for small loans for female entrepreneurs.

The total of loans from the government has reached 151.48 billion yuan (US$24.89 billion), and the total interest subsidy is up to 7.76 billion yuan. The small loan policy has encouraged more than 3 million women to start their own businesses, creating millions of job opportunities.

Song also said the federation would lobby the congress to establish a gender equality evaluation mechanism for a fairer social status for women in policymaking and execution.

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