From the Left

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Politics

Great Leap Nowhere

Ruth Marcus on

BEIJING -- Women, Chairman Mao famously proclaimed, hold up half the sky. But not half the Politburo.

Chinese politics may be the ultimate old boys' club. Of the 25-member Politburo, only two are women. Female membership on the larger Central Committee has actually fallen, from 7.6 percent in 1969 to 4.9 percent today. Just one of 31 provincial governors is a woman.

In other countries, female parliamentary representation has been rising; in China, it has been stuck around 22 percent since the 1970s -- a share, it must be said, that exceeds the U.S. Congress'.

Most significant, since the Communist Party took power in 1949, no woman has served on its ruling structure, the seven-member Politburo Standing Committee.

Meanwhile, the notion of a Hillary Clinton-like figure poised to lead the country -- indeed, even to serve as its chief diplomat -- seems remote. It was big news here that Peng Liyuan, a renowned folk singer and the wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping, took a public role after her husband took office in 2012, working on causes such as rural education and combating HIV/AIDS even as she made best-dressed lists. Leaders' wives have remained resolutely behind the scenes -- their names even blocked from search engines -- since Mao's wife, Jiang Qing, was accused of grasping for power and fomenting the Cultural Revolution.

"In just about every other category of the way one analyzes Chinese elite leadership -- regional background or education or how much they've studied foreign languages or traveled abroad -- there have been dramatic, fundamental shifts from the Mao era and even in the last 10 years," said Scott Kennedy, director of Indiana University's Research Center for Chinese Politics & Business. "The single area where there has not been a dramatic shift has been in the place of women in the leadership."

 

Ask government officials and private citizens about this phenomenon and they respond with a mix of denial and disinterest: There is no problem, because the law guarantees equal rights; anyway, women aren't terribly interested in political office.

Often, they pointed to the surge of female entrepreneurs building billion-dollar empires. According to the Shanghai-based Hurun Report, Chinese women account for 19 of 45 self-made billionaires worldwide, including the three richest.

Yet those rosy figures obscure a less attractive private-sector reality.

A 2010 government report, the Third Survey on Chinese Women's Social Status, found a widening income gap, with women's earnings on average 67 percent that of men in cities, and 56 percent in rural areas, down 10 and 23 percentage points from 1990. According to a report by U.N. Women, "Women are concentrated in service-sector jobs, or work in rural areas for low pay." The mandatory retirement age for women is 50 or 55, depending on the job, compared to 60 for men.

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