5 women join Japanese Cabinet

Premier foresees ‘wind of change’ for male-run society

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrives for a group photo in Tokyo with his new Cabinet, including five female ministers (from left) Yuko Obuchi, Sanae Takaichi, Haruko Arimura, Eriko Yamatani and Midori Matsushima.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrives for a group photo in Tokyo with his new Cabinet, including five female ministers (from left) Yuko Obuchi, Sanae Takaichi, Haruko Arimura, Eriko Yamatani and Midori Matsushima.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

TOKYO -- Japan's prime minister picked five women for his Cabinet on Wednesday, matching the past record and sending the strongest message yet about his determination to change deep-seated views on gender and revive the economy by getting women on board as workers and leaders.

Japan has a vast pool of talented, well-educated women, but they are underrepresented in positions of power in government and corporations. Women make up 10 percent of parliament and just 3.9 percent of board members of listed Japanese companies, versus 12 percent at U.S. corporations and 18 percent in France.

Women in Japan have long complained about the obstacles to being taken seriously at work, receiving equal pay for equal work and finding child care or helpful spouses.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe reiterated Wednesday that a key part of his growth strategy is making greater use of women and promoting them to leadership posts. Abe has set a goal of having women in 30 percent of leadership positions in both the private and public sectors by 2020.

"Realizing a society where women can shine is a challenge our Cabinet has undertaken," he said during a news conference. "I look forward to the wind of change these women will bring."

Having five women in the Cabinet, which currently has 18 members, is extremely rare for Japan. It matches the highest number set back in 2001 under Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. Abe's previous Cabinet, dissolved earlier in the day, had two female ministers.

Although ministerial positions are in some ways ceremonial in Japan, where government affairs are largely run by professional bureaucrats, expanding the presence of women in a place as high profile as the Cabinet was seen as a step toward sexual equality.

"As a woman, I am happy to have even one additional woman in power. There doesn't have to be a reason. I am rooting for them," said Kazuko Watanabe, a public relations specialist in the port city of Yokohama. "I hope they do their best to get the job done."

Yuko Obuchi, daughter of a former prime minister, was named trade and economy minister, probably the most prominent post, and Midori Matsushima was appointed justice minister.

"I am usually not that conscious about being a woman politician," said Matsushima, who has been a lawmaker for more than decade.

But Matsushima said she wanted to start a debate about Japan's relatively light penalties for sexual assaults, as well as continue to push for the protection of crime victims' human rights.

Some experts said upsetting male colleagues who had been waiting to get promotions could weaken Abe's grip on power, but others said he may strengthen his position by inspiring women, who are very active in party politics in Japan at the voter level, even if not in senior positions.

Several top ministers were retained, such as Fumio Kishida as foreign minister and Taro Aso as finance minister, both men.

Other women appointed by Abe include Sanae Takaichi as minister of internal affairs and communications and Eriko Yamatani as minister in charge of Japanese abducted by North Korea, an area where she has been active in the past.

Haruko Arimura was tapped to be minister in charge of promoting women, a new post, in addition to minister of food safety and regulation reform. All five women currently are legislators.

Satomi Moroda, who heads the nonprofit Women and Work Research Center in Tokyo, said society must evolve from the entrenched mindset that the primary roles of women are that of wife and mother, while the man's role is to work outside the home.

"The appointments of women mark progress," she said. "We must first start with numbers, or things won't move forward."

A Section on 09/04/2014