In January, when JAL Group, the guardian firm of Japan Airways, named Mitsuko Tottori its subsequent CEO, world media hailed the appointment as a victory for gender equality. Tottori, 59, is the primary feminine chief government within the service’s 73-year historical past. In contrast to her male predecessors, a lot of whom graduated from elite Tokyo College, Tottori attended a little-known junior faculty for girls and commenced her profession as a flight attendant.
But when Tottori’s ascent is a breakthrough for Japanese girls, in one other sense, its novelty highlights the extraordinary sturdiness of Japan’s glass ceiling. Of the 1,836 corporations listed on the top-tier “prime” part of the Tokyo Inventory Change, solely 15 have been led by girls, or lower than 1%, in accordance with a January 2023 report by credit score analysis agency Teikoku Databank. On Japanese boards, girls occupy 13% of the seats on the trade’s prime market corporations, in contrast with 32% and 33% respectively for corporations listed on the U.S.’s Nasdaq and New York Inventory Change, and 40% at corporations buying and selling on European exchanges.
Ladies are underrepresented in boardrooms the world over. Of the corporations ranked on this 12 months’s Fortune World 500, simply 28 are run by girls. However the gender hole yawns particularly vast in Asia, the place solely 4 World 500 corporations—Chinese language on-line retailer JD.com, Indonesian oil and gasoline large Pertamina, Korea Fuel, and Chinese language electronics parts producer Luxshare Precision Trade—have girls CEOs.
Make no mistake: Asia has an abundance of proficient feminine enterprise leaders. Fortune’s new Most Highly effective Ladies Asia checklist acknowledges 100 of them, chosen from a roster of executives and entrepreneurs that will get deeper yearly.
And but Asian corporations lag Western counterparts by virtually each significant measure of gender equality, together with workforce participation, seniority, pay, and board illustration. In China and India, the area’s two largest economies, the proportion of ladies within the workforce has declined steadily for the reason that Nineteen Nineties. South Korea and Japan have among the many highest gender pay gaps of Group for Financial Cooperation and Improvement nations. And whereas Malaysia leads the area in gender equality on company boards, with girls accounting for 28.5% of administrators and matching the worldwide common, in Asia’s different main economies the proportion of ladies administrators stays beneath 20%, in accordance with a 2023 survey by Deloitte.
The area’s authorities and enterprise leaders are transferring, slowly, to create extra alternatives for girls. Japan has succeeded in dramatically boosting the variety of girls within the workforce. Inventory markets in Asia’s three largest monetary hubs—Hong Kong, Singapore, and Tokyo—have set specific targets for reinforcing the share of feminine administrators. And the patriarchs of Asia’s largest family-owned companies appear more and more prepared to move the reins to daughters, not simply sons.
Tan Su Shan, who subsequent March will grow to be the primary feminine CEO of DBS Group, a Singapore-based financial institution that’s Southeast Asia’s largest lender, sees trigger for optimism now that previous prejudices about girls in enterprise are lastly fading. “It’s a good time to be a lady chief in Asia,” she declares.
However the image is complicated, and prospects for girls leaders range tremendously from economic system to economic system. Think about China, which faces the challenges of an growing old, shrinking workforce, and has each purpose to encourage extra girls to work and be a part of the manager ranks. Equality of the sexes is enshrined in China’s structure, and an oft-cited revolutionary slogan holds that “girls maintain up half the sky.” However present Chinese language management has emphasised a return to conventional roles for girls. At an October assembly of the All-China Ladies’s Federation, Chinese language president Xi Jinping exhorted delegates to “actively foster a brand new sort of marriage and childbearing tradition.” A current report by Bain & Co. in collaboration with government search agency Spencer Stuart discovered that, though Chinese language women and men start their careers “on related beginning traces” primarily based on training and workforce participation, “solely a small proportion of ladies in China attain the manager ranks … and only a few grow to be CEOs.” The report discovered that ladies maintain solely about 19% of government seats in China. A majority of ladies surveyed by authors of the report mentioned their households didn’t perceive their profession ambitions, whereas their employers did not help them in managing household duties.
In Hong Kong, Bonnie Chan, the primary lady CEO of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), which runs the monetary hub’s bourse, is main a high-profile marketing campaign to steer the two,600 corporations traded on the trade to forswear single-gender boards. In 2022, the trade’s itemizing committee, which Chan then headed, introduced that every one corporations on the trade could be required to incorporate each women and men on their boards by the top of 2024. The push appears to be getting traction: Chan says that as of August, the variety of listed corporations with single-gender boards has fallen to fewer than 350, down from 800 two years in the past, and regardless of the lengthy odds, she says she has a “excessive degree of confidence” that every one corporations will adjust to the brand new rule by year-end.
HKEX hasn’t introduced penalties for corporations that miss the deadline, however Chan warns there shall be penalties. Failure to heed the single-gender-board ban, she says, shall be handled “no in a different way than a breach of compliance for different obligatory guidelines. A letter shall be despatched to the corporate asking for an evidence. The itemizing committee will resolve on actions to be taken.”
A showdown may very well be tough. Among the many holdouts are China’s state-owned corporations, whose administrators are usually appointed by the State-Owned Belongings Supervision and Administration Fee, a Beijing oversight physique. However information revealed by David Webb, an activist investor primarily based in Hong Kong, means that the most important Hong Kong–listed Chinese language SOEs (state-owned enterprises) have just lately added girls administrators.
Roughly 19% of the administrators of Hong Kong–listed corporations are girls. The Hong Kong Change hasn’t set a compulsory quota for the share of ladies administrators on the boards of listed corporations; Chan doesn’t assume that shall be crucial. “I hope everybody will admire that this genuinely provides worth,” she says.
One danger is “overboarding,” the place the identical girls sit on a number of boards, which improves numbers however doesn’t enhance actual variety. Amongst Tokyo-listed corporations, 30% of ladies administrators sit on multiple board, double the share of males, in accordance with Reuters.
Singapore, too, eschews formal quotas in favor of voluntary targets. The Council for Board Range (CBD), an advisory physique established by the city-state’s Ministry of Social and Household Improvement, has set a objective of boosting the proportion of feminine administrators at Singapore’s 100 largest corporations past 30% by 2030, up from 23.7% in 2023. Singapore fares much less favorably in board variety if the lens is widened to incorporate all 700 corporations on the Singapore Inventory Change. At these corporations, solely 16% of administrators are girls, and 38% had all-male boards, in accordance with the CBD. Notably, although, Singapore’s Oversea-Chinese language Banking Corp., which with revenues of $18 billion is Southeast Asia’s third-largest lender, is led by Helen Wong (No. 2 on this 12 months’s MPW Asia checklist).
Tan argues that ladies in Singapore start their careers with many benefits over males. Amongst youthful employees, extra girls than males have faculty levels, and males are required to carry out two years of army service. However typically the tables are turned after girls give delivery, with girls anticipated to stay residence and lift youngsters. In August, Singapore introduced that it could enhance government-paid parental depart to 30 weeks by 2026, up from 20 weeks at the moment. The federal government additionally moved final 12 months to legalize egg freezing, a measure Tan, a former member of parliament, has advocated for greater than a decade.
No Asian economic system has grappled with gender equality extra arduously than Japan, a nation vexed by the world’s oldest workforce, among the many world’s lowest delivery charges, and a long-standing aversion to immigrant labor. Japan’s overwhelmingly male authorities and enterprise leaders know girls should have a larger position within the office if Japan’s economic system is to outlive, a lot much less thrive. However the Japanese expertise underscores how difficult it may be for corporations to appropriate gender imbalances even when there may be broad consensus that doing so is an existential crucial, not only a matter of social justice.
“In Japan as we speak, the sensation is that everybody understands the ‘why’” for creating extra alternatives for girls within the office, says Tokyo-based enterprise investor Kathy Matsui. “However everybody nonetheless struggles with the ‘how.’”
Matsui, previously vice chair of Goldman Sachs Japan, has been explaining the “why” since 1999 when she coauthored a analysis report that coined the time period “womenomics.” Japan’s once-booming economic system had languished for a decade within the wake of a inventory and property collapse. Matsui, a Japanese American educated at Harvard, argued that Japan’s finest hope for revival was rising the labor provide by getting extra girls to work and making it simpler for them to stability the duties of labor and elevating youngsters. Japan, she calculated, might enhance GDP development to 2.5% from 2.3% by rising Japan’s feminine labor participation ratio to 59%, the U.S. degree, up from the nation’s then-prevailing price of fifty%.
To attain that objective, Matsui suggested, Japan’s authorities would wish to introduce a raft of latest insurance policies to enhance parental-leave advantages, develop entry to day care, and mandate equal pay for equal work. Companies must grow to be extra family-friendly and promote extra girls to administration roles.
Japan overshot Matsui’s goal—by a mile. Coverage-makers and corporations step by step embraced the logic of accelerating the position of ladies within the labor market. Then in 2012, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe cited Matsui in explicitly endorsing “womenomics” as a key element of his financial coverage platform. Within the years since, Japanese authorities have dramatically expanded subsidies and tax breaks for households with youngsters and elevated the variety of childcare facilities. Japanese mother and father are actually entitled to take 180 days of parental depart at two-thirds of month-to-month pay.
Tens of millions of Japanese girls went to work. For girls in prime working years, these between the ages of 25 and 54, Japan’s feminine labor participation price has surged to a document excessive of 83%, in contrast with 77% for the U.S. Japan’s workforce is rising now whilst its inhabitants continues to shrink.
However by different metrics, Japan stays a laggard on gender equality. Greater than half of ladies in Japan’s workforce maintain part-time jobs, in accordance with Japan’s Ministry of Well being, Labor, and Welfare—and even these with full-time positions maintain extra junior roles and earn considerably lower than their male counterparts. Ladies in Japan earn 22% lower than males, in accordance with the OECD, the widest pay hole amongst any of the Group of Seven economies. In its 2024 World Gender Hole report, the World Financial Discussion board ranked Japan 118 out of 146 nations.
And whereas extra girls are working, there was no comparable enhance within the variety of girls in Japanese boardrooms. In June of final 12 months, the Japanese authorities set a goal for girls to make up not less than 30% of prime-market listed firm boards by 2030. Extra just lately the federal government moved to require companies with greater than 300 employees, each listed and unlisted, to reveal the share of ladies they make use of in administration positions regularly. Buyers, too, are turning up the stress. International funds together with Goldman Sachs Asset Administration and Norway’s large sovereign wealth fund have declared they are going to vote in opposition to board nominations of Japanese corporations with out girls administrators. Japan’s Nomura Asset Administration has vowed to do likewise.
Courtesy of HKEX
Critics of such ways complain corporations ought to be free to rent leaders on benefit and expertise with out regard to gender. However Tottori’s appointment suggests Japan has loads of proficient girls leaders who’ve been ignored. In 1985, when she joined the aviation trade, girls weren’t thought of for government roles at large corporations like JAL, which was based in 1951 as a state-owned service earlier than changing into unbiased in 1987. When the corporate went bankrupt in 2010, the federal government recruited a maverick, Kyocera founder Kazuo Inamori, to show issues round. Inamori—who lamented in a 2012 BBC interview that the corporate had misplaced contact with prospects—led a metamorphosis of JAL’s company tradition and aggressively promoted frontline operators over bureaucrats. Tottori was chief buyer officer earlier than she was promoted to the highest job.
If Tottori represents a brand new model of Japanese feminine government, one who arrived within the C-suite by way of an unconventional path, Makiko Ono may be the premier instance of a lady rising by way of dogged willpower.
Maybe Japan’s most high-profile lady enterprise chief, Ono is CEO of Suntory Beverage and Meals, the nonalcoholic division of drinks large Suntory Holdings. With $11 billion in income, accounting for 54% of group gross sales, SB&F is the most important listed Japanese firm with a feminine CEO. Ono joined the mergers and acquisitions group of Suntory in 1982 after learning Portuguese at Tokyo College. One among her first initiatives was the agency’s profitable bid for the Château Lagrange vineyard in Bordeaux. Later, when Ono requested to be transferred to France to study extra concerning the wine enterprise and search for different funding alternatives for the group, the HR division turned her down. In its 80-year historical past, the corporate had by no means posted a feminine worker outdoors Japan.
However Ono waited for the world to show. In 1991, she was transferred to Suntory France to deal with the corporate’s wine enterprise, changing into the corporate’s first feminine expat. She helped Suntory forge partnerships with Britain’s Lucozade and Ribena, and later with French soda maker Orangina. In 1997, Ono returned to Tokyo to grow to be the advertising director for Häagen-Dazs Japan, wherein Suntory has a 40% stake. After a stint as Suntory Holdings chief sustainability officer, Ono was chosen as SB&F CEO in 2023.
Ono is single and has informed Japanese media that she may not have risen to management if she had married and had youngsters. However she boasts that now 100% of SB&F feminine staff who give delivery return to work.
That’s a constructive instance for corporations all through the area. The problem now, for Suntory and different Asian corporations, is to make sure that as soon as these girls return to work, they’ve an equal probability to steer.
This text seems within the October/November 2024 difficulty of Fortune with the headline “A gradual ascent to the highest.”