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[六级大学英语阅读] 六级阅读资料 Women managers in Asia: Untapped talent.

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Women managers in Asia: Untapped talent.

Sexism is rife in Asia. That creates an opportunity for non-chauvinist firms. IN THE West, women typically make up 10-20% of upper management and company boards. They are relatively lucky. A report from McKinsey, a consultancy, shows that Asian women lag far behind.

There are exceptions. In Australia womens share of board and executive-committee jobs is roughly on a par with that in America and parts of Europe. Singapore too has a large number of women in senior management . But elsewhere the picture is mostly dire, and not necessarily because the countries concerned are poor. In Japan and South Korea, both rich, women are about as likely to sit on boards as men are to serve tea. One reason why so few women in Asia get plum jobs is that in most countries far fewer of them are in the workforce than in the West, where their labour-force participation rate is usually around 60-70%. In India only about one woman in three has a formal job, though millions sweaton farms and in family businesses. Education is unequal, too. In 2009-10 only 10-15% of students entering the elite Indian Institutes of Management were female. But even in Asian countries where plenty of women leap from college onto the corporate ladder, they do not climb as high as men. The most common reasons given are much the same as in Europe: the double burden of work anddomestic responsibilities; the requirement in many senior jobs to be always available and free to travel; womens reluctance to blow their own trumpet; and the scarcity of female role models. In Asia, an additional hurdle is the lack of public services to support families, such as child care. So is it just a question of waiting until Asia catches up with the West? The McKinsey reports authors, Claudia Sssmuth-Dyckerhoff, Jin Wang and Josephine Chen, think it is not as simple as that. Having studied 744 large companies and quizzed 1,500 executives in ten Asian countries, they conclude that, unlike their Western counterparts, Asian senior managers are not very interested in the subject. Some 70% of them did not see gender diversity as a strategicpriority. The McKinsey authors think such managers are misguided. They point to companies in Asia that have done well out of recruiting lots of women, such as Shiseido, a Japanese cosmetics company , and Cisco, an American technology firm which snaps up Asian female talent. It is one of several Western firms that benefit from Asian sexism, in that it is easier to recruit good women when their compatriots ignore them. A study in 2011 by HeidrickStruggles, a headhunter, found that a third of Asian executives were worried about being able to attract and retain the staff they needed in the next two years.

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