Business

M’sia progresses to empower women, but more support needed: Women In Tech

Must recognise importance of female participation to advance economically, says Yuki Aizawa

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 01 May 2023 11:39AM

M’sia progresses to empower women, but more support needed: Women In Tech
Women In Tech Malaysia country director Yuki Aizawa says there is still a big gap that must be filled with a mandatory support system including a legal framework, policies, and engagement with stakeholders in small and medium enterprises, which make up 98.5% of all businesses in Malaysia, to ensure that women are supported fairly in their career journey. – The Vibes pic, May 1, 2023

KUALA LUMPUR – Countries that aspire to advance economically must recognise the importance of women’s participation in the science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics (STEAM) field.

Global non-profit international organisation Women In Tech country director Yuki Aizawa said although Malaysia is seen as progressive in empowering women’s rights, it lacks the needed support to ensure that women can excel in STEAM and other fields in a safe and equal environment.

“Women are the most untapped resources. In Malaysia, big corporations have started to embrace women’s leadership thanks to ESG (environment, social and governance) requirements and the United Nations’ sustainable development goals that can be measured.

“These organisations have no choice but to come in with sustainability reports and transparency including salary scale, gender pay gap, hiring and retention, among other issues. 

“With these forced factors, cultural shifts will happen and women will have the avenue to speak up and discuss related issues more freely,” said Aizawa.

However, in small and medium enterprises, which make up 98.5% of all businesses in Malaysia, there is still a big gap that needs to be filled with a mandatory support system.

This includes a legal framework, policies, and engagement with stakeholders to ensure that women are supported fairly in their career journey.

“For example, where there is one woman and 10 men working in a technical field, and they have to work overtime, this could be a scary space for women. Therefore, mandates such as anti-sexual harassment (regulations) have to be put in place,” she said.

For the Malaysian chapter, she said Women in Tech is also constantly working to connect and support women via networking events and community programmes.

“Why do we need to produce more female leaders to eliminate the gap? It is because we have seen better decision-making trends and overall company performance improve as women can do equally if not better in certain industries.

“Even girls in schools are doing better than boys. But data showed only 34% of STEAM graduates are women in this country. 

“In the labour force, women make up only 35% of the digital economy, and 55% in the overall economy,” she said.

According to the Global Gender Gap Index 2022, women made up 33% of the workforce in 2022 but hold only 25% of leadership positions at the 20 largest global technology companies, she said.             

Thus, Aizawa said women must be supported to advance in self-development. Gaps such as family culture, lack of female role models, early exit or challenges of returning to work, and unconscious bias must be addressed by gradually shifting the community’s mindset.

Women In Tech is headquartered in France and is present in 45 countries. It aims to impact by building skills and confidence and setting women up for success.

The local chapter was launched a year ago and focuses on education, business (entrepreneurship), advocacy, and social inclusion to encompass projects to empower the B40 income group. – Bernama, May 1, 2023

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