China Daily

Legal design for protection of women’s rights

- Qiao Xinsheng The author is a professor of Zhongnan University of Economics and Law.

The ratio of career women to housewives in China, compared with many other countries, is high. Therefore, women in China need better protection in terms of maternity leave and other benefits, especially now that the government has allowed all couples to have two children.

But many employers in China are reluctant to grant even the legally binding maternity leave, let alone give women extra leave, in violation of the Law on the Protection of Women’s Rights and Interests. In fact, quite a large number of employers, in order to avoid the hassle of having to deal with women’s labor rights and maternity benefits in the future, refuse to recruit them in the first place, which is one of the worst forms of gender discrimina­tion.

To effectivel­y protect women’s rights, therefore, the government has to take certain factors into considerat­ion while drafting legislatio­n. First, it should encourage the employers to recruit women. For example, the government can offer some tax concession­s to the companies whose certain percentage of employees are women.

Second, apart from offering tax concession­s, the government’s human resources and social security department­s should tighten their supervisio­n to ensure the employers are not violating female employees’ rights, and take strict punitive action against them if they do so.

Third, female workers should be encouraged to voluntaril­y register — and timely update — their basic informatio­n with local government human resources and social security department­s, so that if their employers deny them maternity leave, the relevant department­s can intervene and penalize the employers. Monitoring and supervisio­n should complement the government’s offer of tax concession­s to companies whose certain of percentage of staff are women.

Many companies and organizati­ons are reluctant to hire women or assign them important positions because they fear the women’s “long” absence from work during advanced pregnancy and nursing periods will cause unnecessar­y losses. In this context, the government’s tax concession­s could prompt the employers to change their minds, and recruit more women as staff.

China is losing its demographi­c advantages, especially because of the fast-rising aging population and the falling number of working-age people. Encouragin­g women to have two children and thus increasing the workingage population can, in the long run, neutralize this loss. And protecting working women’s rights and interests (and offering them some extra benefits) is the best way to encourage them to have two children.

The existing laws to protect the rights and interests of women are principled but not effective. Some clauses are like“tooth less tigers” because they don’ t come with punitive measures. As such, we need fool proof legislatio­n to effectivel­y protect women’ s rights and interests, and the government should strengthen supervisio­n to ensure the laws are followed both in letter and spirit.

Discrimina­tion against women in work places, or any other field for that matter, has no place in modern society. And considerin­g that the sustained growth of the country’ s economy is related to women’ s rights and interests, the government should take effective measures to guarantee they are not only protected,but also respected, because only a society that treats women with respect can be a fair society.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

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