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Why are so many women in China rich?

Lord ZeN

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A look at a surprising chapter in the rise of the biggest economy in the world.

I’m halfway through Age of Ambition, Evan Osnos’ riveting account of 21st century China, when I start noticing the number of ground-breaking women who populate his story.

Osnos compares modern China—a billion-plus people suddenly baptized in the waters of aspiration and ambition—to the Gilded Age, when the number of U.S. millionaires exploded from 20 to 40,000 in just a generation.

But while America’s rush to fortune in the late 1800s was a man’s story, China’s financial wild west (as Osnos notes) includes the other half of the population. And if American women have been historically tepid about embracing a get-rich culture, women in post-Mao China haven’t been shy at all.

In China, where “the ethos of the last 30 years is that to get rich is glorious, that instinct is gender neutral,” Osnos tells me. “I never encountered a sense [among women] of being inhibited about wanting to get rich. One of the measurements they have for themselves is the financial success of their companies and themselves.”

Consider these numbers:

  • The number of Chinese women in senior management positions has recently doubled, with 51% of those jobs held by females, making China a standout in Asia.
  • Some 550 publicly-traded companies, or about 21%, have women on their boards. And Shenzhen-based Ceetop Inc. and China Teletech Holding Inc. are two of the four companies in the world with all-female boards.
  • Half of the world’s self-made female billionaires are Chinese.
There are, of course, endless caveats to be applied to any conversation about the status of women in China. Osnos notes that women went into business because the Communist Party was–and still is–a boys’ club that shuts them out of political leadership. And men still boast far higher net worths, helped by parents eager to help them build real-estate nest eggs to attract daughters-in-law from a limited pool of women,

But the same one-child policy that led to a shortage of prospective daughters-in-law (with parents favoring sons in the womb) has also produced a generation of doted-upon only-children who happen to be girls. Deprived of sons, parents and grandparents heaped their high expectations on daughters and grand-daughters. Hence, Osnos notes, the most popular Chinese parenting guide was calledHarvard Girl, not Harvard Boy.

The ambitions of Chinese women remain curtailed by family—they, more than men, are expected to care for aging parents—and entrenched cultural bias. A leading Chinese business school describes the paradox this way:

“In a country where men-only jobs proliferate, and hiring managers often probe female applicants about their dating life and maternal plans, it’s easy to forget that China is home to some of the highest net-worth female individuals in the world, the majority of whom achieved such status through their business success.”

Osnos prefers to go beyond the numbers to tell us the human story—like that of Gong Hainan, born small and sickly in a rural village, her leg and face later crushed in a tractor accident. Despite all that, Gong couldn’t repress her entrepreneurial gene. As a child, she bought and resold ice pops to villagers, mapping out a route of likely buyers and noting, “Whatever you do, you have to be strategic.”

Her mother was so dedicated to her daughter’s education after the tractor accident that she carried her up and down the stairs to classes. Gong later worked on a Panasonic assembly-line before returning to school and excelling in college. Considered “ugly” and unable to find a mate, she launched an online dating service, thereby breaking into the male-dominated high-tech world. By 2010, she was known as China’s No. 1 matchmaker. She took her company public on NASDAQ and ended the day worth $77 million, shared with –yes, she found one—her husband.

Gong’s story—from farmer’s daughter to board room “so fast she never had time to shed the manners and anxieties of the village,” as Osnos puts it, made me think of so many other up-from-the-bootstrap stories featuring women. One is SOHO China CEO Zhang Xin, the real estate developer who is transforming Beijing’s skyline. Zhang spent her teenage years on a Hong Kong assembly line but eventually made her way to New York, prominent UK universities, and onto Goldman Sachs.

Like China’s men in this “age of self-creation,’ these women “defied a history that told them never to try,” in Osnos’ words. But all that long-pent-up ambition, Osnos writes, is now colliding with another powerful force–China’s authoritarianism.

For women, that clash is playing out in government-led social pressure on ambitious women to marry or risk becoming Leftover Women, the title of Leta Hong Fincher’s 2014 book. The ruling Communist Party is pushing marriage to counter fears of social instability that could come from so many unmarried men–but the blame is being heaped on women, especially educated women.

As Fincher notes, the government’s All-China Women’s Federation had this to say about unmarried urban females over 27: “Do leftover women really deserve our sympathy? Girls with an average or ugly appearance … hope to further their education in order to increase their competitiveness. The tragedy is they don’t realise that, as women age, they are worth less and less, so by the time they get their MA or PhD, they are already old, like yellowed pearls.”

It remains to seen how these “yellowed pearls” respond.

Why are there so many rich, powerful women in China? - Fortune
 
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hmmm.... now i get it.. Chinese female outdo males in china in most spheres of life...
Chinese women are among the most progressive & hardworking women- class among the Asian societies. It's no wonder that they find success in all fields. Women can equal or outperform men if given adequate freedom & opportunity It's one of many things we Indians can learn from the Chinese..
 
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It all comes down to merit. Chinese will follow anyone who is intelligent, strong and hardworking be it man or woman.

Ive read that some animal herds including killer whales and elephants will sometimes have the oldest female leading the herd and not the strongest male.


On a side note, one problem with women in the work place is that they can get angry (to say the least). Fortunately, they tend to be nasty to other women and lighter on the men. At least in my experience.
 
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Half of the world’s self-made women billionaires are from China – Quartz

Half of the world’s female billionaires who made their own fortunes are Chinese. That’s according to a global ranking of women executives released today (Sept. 17). In the Hurun Report’s list of rich and powerful women (link in Chinese) of the year, 14 of the 28 female entrepreneurs with assets of more than $1 billion (as of Aug. 15) were from mainland China.

That’s notable given China’s long history of gender discrimination. At the top of the list is Chen Lihua, 72, of the real estate firm Fu Wah, whose fortune of 37 billion renminbi (about $6 billion) outpaces that of the recently deceased Rosalia Mera, head of Inditex who was regarded as the richest self-made female entrepreneur in the world when she died. According to the Hurun list, Wu Yajun, 49, a former journalist and founder of the real estate firm Longfor; Zhang Yin, 56, who buys and ships scrap paper from the US to China; and Zhang Xin, 48 of real estate developer Soho China, are all wealthier than Oprah Winfrey.

Their rags-to-riches stories—Zhang once worked in a garment factory and, while studying in the UK, in a fish-and-chip shop, while Chen got her start running a furniture-repair operation—are particularly compelling in a country where many millions have come out of poverty in recent decades and where the one-child policy that began in the 80s has heightened a preference for male children and led to long-standing neglect of girls’ education and career prospects.

All of that seems to be changing. Today, most Chinese women work—as many as 70% by some estimates. A paradoxical side-effect of the one-child policy is that although parents prefer boys, parents with a daughter who is their only child have been more likely to send her to school than if she had been one of several. As of 2011, Chinese womenaccounted for 20% (pdf, p. 21) of all entrepreneurs in the country, according to government statistics.

Still, it’s hard for Chinese women to start their own businesses. Researchers Tonia Warnecke, Lucas Hernandez, and Nicholas Nunn from Rollins College argued in a paper last year (pdf) that many Chinese women start businesses because they can’t find employment elsewhere—and often in the lower-paying informal economy. Women are still shut out of male-dominated networks in a business culture where guanxi, or personal connections, matter greatly. On top of that, they’re under pressure to marry and settle down before the age of 30, and have more trouble than men getting financing for new businesses.
 
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Half of the world’s self-made women billionaires are from China – Quartz

Half of the world’s female billionaires who made their own fortunes are Chinese. That’s according to a global ranking of women executives released today (Sept. 17). In the Hurun Report’s list of rich and powerful women (link in Chinese) of the year, 14 of the 28 female entrepreneurs with assets of more than $1 billion (as of Aug. 15) were from mainland China.

That’s notable given China’s long history of gender discrimination. At the top of the list is Chen Lihua, 72, of the real estate firm Fu Wah, whose fortune of 37 billion renminbi (about $6 billion) outpaces that of the recently deceased Rosalia Mera, head of Inditex who was regarded as the richest self-made female entrepreneur in the world when she died. According to the Hurun list, Wu Yajun, 49, a former journalist and founder of the real estate firm Longfor; Zhang Yin, 56, who buys and ships scrap paper from the US to China; and Zhang Xin, 48 of real estate developer Soho China, are all wealthier than Oprah Winfrey.

Their rags-to-riches stories—Zhang once worked in a garment factory and, while studying in the UK, in a fish-and-chip shop, while Chen got her start running a furniture-repair operation—are particularly compelling in a country where many millions have come out of poverty in recent decades and where the one-child policy that began in the 80s has heightened a preference for male children and led to long-standing neglect of girls’ education and career prospects.

All of that seems to be changing. Today, most Chinese women work—as many as 70% by some estimates. A paradoxical side-effect of the one-child policy is that although parents prefer boys, parents with a daughter who is their only child have been more likely to send her to school than if she had been one of several. As of 2011, Chinese womenaccounted for 20% (pdf, p. 21) of all entrepreneurs in the country, according to government statistics.

Still, it’s hard for Chinese women to start their own businesses. Researchers Tonia Warnecke, Lucas Hernandez, and Nicholas Nunn from Rollins College argued in a paper last year (pdf) that many Chinese women start businesses because they can’t find employment elsewhere—and often in the lower-paying informal economy. Women are still shut out of male-dominated networks in a business culture where guanxi, or personal connections, matter greatly. On top of that, they’re under pressure to marry and settle down before the age of 30, and have more trouble than men getting financing for new businesses.

You only get to hear economic cronyism of these ladies when some political big shot falls. Remember Ding Shumiao?
 
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@aliaselin now, i have set my aim in life.

my aim in life: marry rich chinese girl and live peacefully :P

:D
It's not that easy, bro.
First, supply is limited:D.
Second, our boys are also eager to marry those girls.
Third, the rich girls have more requirements. If you are the target of rich girls, then maybe you are also a successful man.

You can find girls in Chinese social networks. Fighting:enjoy:
 
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