海角大神

海角大神 / Text

For Japanese women, Abe's vision of 'womenomics' losing its shine

Prime Minister Abe said he would boost the economy by tapping one of Japan's most underutilized resources: women. But the effort has taken several hits recently.

By Howard LaFranchi , Staff writer
Tokyo

When Japan鈥檚 Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of a physical therapist who claimed her employer had practiced 鈥渕aternity harassment鈥 by demoting her when she became pregnant, it was a victory for a female workforce that struggles for equal treatment.

The shockwave ruling was also a win for beleaguered Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who came into office in 2012 pledging to get a stagnant economy moving again in no small part by boosting women鈥檚 role in it. So key was Mr. Abe鈥檚 vision of women coming to Japan鈥檚 rescue that he coined a name for it: 鈥渨omenomics.鈥

But in recent weeks that effort has been overshadowed by setbacks that have put Mr. Abe on the defensive and left 鈥渨omenomics鈥 looking like a fading gimmick.聽

First, two of the five female ministers Abe named as part of a cabinet reshuffle in September resigned last month over campaign finance irregularities and prohibited campaign activities. One was trade and industry minister Yuko Obuchi, the daughter of the late former prime minister Keizo Obuchi and 鈥 at least until her resignation 鈥 an oft-mentioned potential first woman prime minister.

The other disgraced politician, Midori Matsushima, had to step down as justice minister after it was revealed that her organization had given out hand-held fans during a previous campaign's summer rally. Gifts to voters are illegal.

Japan's wartime history has also served up fresh woes. The Abe government sought unsuccessfully last month to have the United Nations retract part of a 1996 report on forcing women, mostly Koreans, to work as sex slaves in military-run brothels during World War II.聽The effort played well with right-wing supporters who insist the women were prostitutes, but dismayed many Japanese women, some of whom took to social media to express their 鈥渟hame鈥 over Japan鈥檚 past actions 鈥 as well as attempts to whitewash them.聽The move also ran afoul of South Korea鈥檚 President Park Geun-hye, with whom Abe wants to set up a summit meeting. Her message to a delegation of Japanese lawmakers last month was simple: No progress on the comfort women issue, no summit.聽

But perhaps the cruelest evidence that Abe鈥檚 touted 鈥渨omenomics鈥 is so far having little impact came in the form of a World Economic Forum (WEF) report on global gender equality that placed Japan 104th out of 142 countries evaluated. That was better than last year's 105th place, a result of some progress in pay equality. But Japan ranked well below the other members of the Group of Seven wealthy economies and even a few notches below such developing countries as Tajikistan and Indonesia.聽

Still, say some Abe supporters, longer-term prospects are much brighter than one WEF report and a couple of ministerial resignations would suggest.

Masako Mori, a senator from Abe鈥檚 Liberal Democratic Party and until September鈥檚 cabinet reshuffle the minister for gender equality and women鈥檚 empowerment,聽is quick to point out shortcomings when it comes to female workplace participation. Speaking in Tokyo last month at the International Bar Association's annual conference, Senator Mori noted that she and her husband passed the bar together 20 years ago, 鈥渂ut I鈥檓 the one who frequently runs into obstructions.鈥

Sixty percent of working women leave the workforce when they have their first child, she says, while surveys suggest that more than 3 million women who would like to work do not, and for a myriad of reasons ranging from low skills to an inability to find childcare.

But Mori also insists that Japan is taking the steps to allow it to rise significantly on that WEF ranking. Abe has an ambitious plan for government-funded day care that aims to eliminate waiting lists by 2017, she says. And Abe has submitted a bill to the Diet, or parliament, that would require all companies with more than 300 employees to set targets for hiring women and for promoting women to managerial positions.

鈥淣egotiations with [affected companies] were quite, quite difficult,鈥 she says. But she adds that it鈥檚 a measure of the importance Abe gives to his 鈥渨omenomics鈥 that he held firm on getting the legislation to the Diet.

Mori touts the long-term potential of such steps, but she also says social change must happen as well. 鈥淛apanese men are changing,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ecause the women who raise them are changing.鈥

Herself a mother of two, Mori says she took the campaign to improve prospects for women in the workplace to the ministry she ran for 20 months. At the outset, she asked how many of the men working under her had taken childcare leave, for example, 鈥渁nd the answer was zero.鈥

By the time she left in September, 鈥渁ll the young men with a new baby had taken childcare leave,鈥 she says proudly. 鈥淭hat really reflects the new thinking we鈥檙e seeing in Japan.鈥澛