World

Japan delays women leadership target after falling short

‘Extremely behind’ nation ranks 121 out of 153 in global gender gap report

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 25 Dec 2020 10:45PM

Japan delays women leadership target after falling short
Japan’s Cabinet Office blames social acceptance of traditional gender roles for the nation’s slow progress in meeting its gender equality target. – Pixabay pic, December 25, 2020

TOKYO – Japan is “extremely behind” in promoting gender equality its government said today, as it delayed an almost two decades-old target to have at least 30% of leadership positions occupied by women by the end of this year.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s government approved a new five-year plan on gender equality, which says it will make efforts to meet the 30% target “at the earliest possible time” during the next decade.

While Japan ranks highly on a range of international indicators, it persistently trails on promoting gender equality, ranking 121 out of 153 nations surveyed in the 2020 global gender gap report of the World Economic Forum.

Just 14.8% of leadership positions in politics and business in Japan are occupied by women, “lagging extremely behind internationally”, the Cabinet Office said in the new five-year plan.

The new plan replaces the government’s last five-year plan, which included this year’s target.

But the 30% target was originally set in 2003 by the cabinet of then-prime minister Junichiro Koizumi, who adopted the ambitious goal in a bid to force the nation’s male-dominated bureaucracy and Japan Inc businesses to accept diversity.

Former prime minister Shinzo Abe, who stepped down earlier this year, also repeatedly pledged to meet the same target, and made “womenomics” initiatives to include more women in the work force a key plank of his economic policy.

The Cabinet Office blamed social acceptance of traditional gender roles for the slow progress, saying the government will “make efforts so that women will occupy around 30% of leadership positions in the early part of the 2020s”.

In the political sphere, it said, women have to balance political activities and domestic tasks, as well as face various harassments based on their gender.

It added that businesses have not been enthusiastic about promoting women.

“Overall, society as a whole still leans toward stereotypical gender roles and has unconscious bias.”

The new five-year plan had been expected to include mention of a growing social acceptance of allowing women to keep their maiden names after marriage.

Japanese law currently requires married couples to share the same surname, a law that usually results in women changing their names.

But while polling shows public support for changing the law, the new five-year plan stopped short of backing the move, with conservative lawmakers in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party pushing to strike down the idea.

Instead, the plan refers to the issue as a matter for “further discussions”. – AFP, December 25, 2020

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