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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kathy M. Matsui (キャシー・松井, born 1965) is a General Partner of Japan's first ESG-focused[clarification needed] global venture capital fund, MPower Partners. She is a former vice chair and chief Japan strategist for global investment bank Goldman Sachs.[1] She was born in California in 1965.[2] She was credited by Shinzō Abe, prime minister of Japan, with having coined the term "womenomics".[3][4][5][6][7][8] She is a TEDx speaker.[9]

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  • TEDxTokyo - Kathy Matsui - Womenomics - [English]
  • Kathy Matsui speaks on "Womenomics" at AUW's Inaugural Symposium
  • TEDxTokyo - Kathy Pike - Don't Call Me Crazy [English]

Transcription

(Applause) Good morning. So why Womenomics? Back in 1999, I decided to write a research report called "Womenomics", because I strongly believed and I do today, that part of a solution to Japan's myriad of structural challenges lies right in front of our eyes: half the population. What are some of these structural challenges? First and foremost is the D-word, demographics. Many of you are familiar with these statistics, but in case you are not, let me remind you. By the year 2055, in most of our lifetimes, the total population of this archipelago will shrink by one third. By that time, as you see, the percentage of the gray population will have doubled from 20% to over 40%. These statistics are scary and demographics are so severe that -- did you know Japan is the only OECD country, where there are actually more pets than children? (Laughter) I didn't make that up. I looked that up. And if you look at it globally, of course, Japan, the line is here in the red, the percentage of the population that is the workforce population. Of course demographics is a challenge for every developed economy, but Japan, as you can see, is going to be shrinking its workforce population faster than anywhere else. So what are the answers? What are the solutions? Basically, as far as I can tell, there are only three. 1. Raise the birth rate. 2. Change immigration laws. And 3. again, use half the population more effectively. The first one I think the government has tried to fix, but unfortunately, many young Japanese people, many of you may be in this room, have decided to say no to marriage. (Yes to the mic!) And as the ratio of unmarried Japanese rises, of course it is a little bit difficult to raise the birth rate, isn't it. 2. Immigration. I personally believe this is inevitable, but it is likely to take a little bit more time. So that leaves us with the third, I think most practical near-term solution. Good news and bad news. First of all, good news is, Japan's female labor participation rate, women working today, has reached a record high of 60%. I wrote my report 12 years ago and I am glad to see there has been progress. The bad news however is, on a global comparison this is where Japan ranks, well below most other advanced nations, especially in countries like Scandinavia, where that ratio is close to 80%. So what are the issues here? One is what I call the uniquely Japanese phenomenon called the "M字カーブ", the M-curve. What am I talking about here? If you look at this graph, and I know it is a little bit difficult to look at graphs at this hour of the day, but bear with me, this is basically ages, age groups on the horizontal and the vertical is the percentage of women working. Now typically in any society, you leave school, you enter the workforce and you stay in the workforce until you retire. In most economies, that is sort of this hill-shaped curve, but in Japan you have this "谷", you have a valley between the ages of what, late 20s and late 40s. Now ladies and gentlemen, think about this. Those of you who are working, isn't the late 20s to late 40s period in anybody's career the most productive period of one's career? And Japanese women, for the most part, are MIA, missing in action. One of the bigger issues of course, as many of you know, because of the M-curve -- one of the reasons is, that many Japanese mothers don't work. In fact, 70% of Japanese mothers quit working after their first child. And internationally, if you look here, only about roughly a third of Japanese mothers with children under the age of 6 are working. Compare that to Sweden, close to 80%, the US, 60%, etc. Why don't more women work? These are four reasons: day care/nursing care, tax issues, diversity focus, and immigration. Let me focus though on 1. and 3. This is a very common topic of discussion. When we talk about womenomics in Japan, there is simply not sufficient daycare. Yes, the Japanese government has made some progress in expanding those facilities, but the reality is, the percentage of Japanese children under the age of 3 currently in the care of a daycare facility stands at 28%. Look at France, 43%, or Denmark, over 60%. It's not also, by the way, daycare or childcare outside the home, what about inside the home? This of course entertained my husband to know, but the average number of hours, this is a government study, that fathers in Sweden, Norway, US, and Germany spend on childcare and household chores is over 3 hours a day. In Japan, 1 hour a day. And look at that red section of the Japan bar, that is 15 minutes on the children. OK, let me see gentlemen. 15 minutes. You probably spend more than 15 minutes, my guess, taking "お風呂", bath? Maybe more than 15 minutes a day watching TV? OK, let the truth be told. So there is a big issue with cooperation and mutual care, inside the home as well. Inadequate focus on diversity, this is to me a huge issue. The last 5 years, in most of the developed world, we have seen concrete progress. Change doesn't always happen from the bottom up, oftentimes it has to happen from the top down. To change things in society, you do need to put agents of change in leadership positions. So the percentage of Japanese managers is still 9%. This is the same ratio it was 5 years ago. Other countries are 35-50%. We need more role models. Interestingly, let's see, 25 years ago, the Japanese government actually passed the equal employment opportunity law, "均等法". Despite that, on average, Japanese women earn today still only two thirds that of their male counterparts. Now as you can see on this graph, gender wage gaps exist everywhere, not just Japan. But if you think about it, if I am a Japanese woman and no matter how hard I work, no matter how hard I try, I know, that I am always going to be discriminated for pay and promotion. What am I going to do? I'm probably not going to continue, right? So this to me is a law, superficially, but it is not really enforced in the way it should be. Many people ask when I give these talks on Womenomics, "But does it really matter?" And I think, the statistics prove a resounding yes, because if you look at companies that have adopted explicit practices to promote diversity, for example, programs to support working mothers, or programs to ensure objective evaluation and performance metrics, the red bar shows you the average profit margin of those companies is higher than the blue bar of companies that do not. But let me tell you, the number 1 obstacle I encounter when I talk about Womenomics in Japan, is this. "But Matsui-san, if your thesis is right and we have more Japanese women working in society, is that not going to lower the already very low Japanese birthrate?" How many of you have heard that statement before? Yes, many people. Well, it is a very nice thesis, sounds good, but empirically this is false. Look at this graph. I am simply plotting: vertical axis is fertility rate, horizontal axis is women in the workforce. Don't bother with the dots, look at the red line. That is a positively sloped curve. In other words, the more women working in a country, the higher the birthrate, not the opposite. Look at Sweden, United States, United Kingdom, France, Australia. Now the Japanese in this audience don't believe me or don't believe these statistics. It is true in your own country. This is the "47都道府県", 47 prefectures, the slope, look at that, exactly the same. Okinawa, Fukui, Nagano, relatively higher female participation rate in the workforce and relatively higher birthrate. So what is the upside, if we could implement Womenomics? I know it is a bit of a dream, but let's pretend for a moment. If we could raise Japan's female participation rate, I showed you that at 60%, to match that of Japanese males at 80%, this is the potential upside to GDP: 15%! 15% lift to Japanese GDP level. That to me is well worth it. Now what do we do finally? Four things. 1. Change that mindset. Diversity Womenomics should not be an extracurricular activity, it has to be core to a company's bottom line strategy and in order to fulfil longer potential growth for an economy. 2. Flexible work and objective evaluation practices. Flexible work, many people talk about flexible work for women. Think about it. If more Japanese women are not getting married, that must mean there are also lot of single Japanese men, who are single child, who have to take care of eventually their ageing parents, no? They are going to need time off. They are going to need more flexible work styles. So this is not a gender issue. Flexible work arrangements are for men and women. 3. Deregulation of nursing, daycare, and immigration. Japan has agreed with the governments of the Philippines and Indonesia to welcome 1000 nurses. That is great. But if you want to stay beyond three years, guess what, you need to pass a national certification exam in Japanese to stay and keep your visa. Last February, 257 nurses took this test, 3 nurses passed. If you are going to invite them, don't set the bar so high. Finally, a critical mass of female role models. This is very important. I actually used to be a huge opponent to anything related to quotas, affirmative action. I have begun to evolve my thinking. The government of Norway, 2004, adopted a legal quota system, so that every publicly listed company in Norway had to have at least 40% of their corporate boards female. Now can you imagine if you are sitting in corporate Norway at that time, you said "No way!". There are not enough talented capable Norwegian women to fill our board's seats. It ain't gonna happen. Guess what happened. One year went by, two years went by. Today, most companies have fulfilled this legal quota of 40%. Why? Because the women were there. They just crawled out of the woodwork. They were lifted by other people and now they are in important positions of decision making. This is not impossible. And I think Japan in particular, given how far behind it is, maybe does need a little bit of an extra push to take the numbers up. And finally for those of you in this room who are female and there is lots of you and that is great to see, if you don't remember anything from my presentation today, remember one thing: there is no such thing as a glass ceiling, it is just a thick layer of men. Thank you very much. (Applause)

Life and career

Matsui's parents were Japanese Christians who emigrated from Nara Prefecture in Japan to the United States[10] in the early 1960s. She was born in California in 1965,[11] where her parents ran a commercial flower nursery in Salinas Valley.[10] She has three siblings, Teresa, William, and Paul.[12] Growing up, she worked in the family business while attending school and taking Japanese classes on Saturdays.[12]

Matsui is a 1982 graduate of Gonzales High School. A small rural school district at the time served Gonzales, CA; Soledad, CA; Chualar, CA and the surrounding ranches and farm in central Salinas Valley.

Matsui earned degrees in social studies from Harvard University and international affairs from Johns Hopkins University.[12] In 1986 she visited Japan for the first time—two years on a Rotary scholarship at the International Christian University in Tokyo. Before this, she had only a weak command of the Japanese language.[11] Matsui joined the Japan Strategy team of Barclays de Zoete Wedd Securities in spring 1990, just after the Japanese bubble economy peaked. She joined Goldman Sachs Japan in 1994,[10] where she became managing director in 1998[12] and the first female partner there[10] in 2000.[12]

In August 1999 Matsui published a thesis in which she coined the term "womenomics", in which she argues increasing the participation of women in the workforce as a better solution to Japan's economic stagnation than increasing immigration or the birthrate. At the time, 56.7% of working-age women participated in the workforce in Japan, where women's status and opportunities have ranked low compared to most other nations. She likened such low participation to "running a marathon with one leg".[12]

Since her publication on womenomics, Japan’s female labor force participation rate has risen to record levels that surpass both the US and Europe. The narrowing of the gender employment gap in Japan could thus sizably increase the nation's GDP by at least 10%.

In 2001, Matsui was diagnosed with breast cancer. She returned to California for chemotherapy and recuperation. She wore a wig when she returned to Goldman Sachs eight months later.[12]

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe incorporated Matsui's womenomics research into his Abenomics economic reforms announced in 2012.[12] On 1 January 2015 she was appointed a vice chair of Goldman Sachs Japan.[13]

She is an advocate for women and pushes to enforce the vitality of women across all workspaces supported by policy and legislative recommendations. She lobbies for flexible labor contracts, tax reforms, looser immigration laws, and parliamentary gender quotas.

In 2014 Matsui was named "50 Most Influential" in Bloomberg Markets magazine for her implementation of "womenomics" into the field of investment banking and straight into her workplace at Goldman Sachs.[14]

By 2020, she terminated her job at Goldman Sachs to pursue MPower Partners Fund. In 2021, she announced the creation of MPower Partners Fund - an entirely female-led fund that aims to allocate money towards startups. The capital that is allocated through the fund pushes towards investing in startups that use technology to tackle social issues with an emphasis on those that tackle health, education, and the environment. Creating this foundation emphasized Matsui's revolution of womenomics and instated it as a core value in the fund. Matsui aims to not only diversify the world of venture capital, but also to meet levels of diversity at the first stage of a startups' business cycle.[15]

Recognition

The magazine Institutional Investor named her the No. 1 stock market forecaster for Japan in 2000, 2001, and 2006,[12] and the Wall Street Journal chose her in 2007 as one of "10 Women to Watch in Asia".[10]

Personal life

Matsui is married to Jesper Koll[12] and is the mother of a son and daughter, both of whom were born in Japan.[11]

References

  1. ^ "'Womenomics' advocate Kathy Matsui to leave Goldman Sachs". Nikkei Asia. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  2. ^ Natsuko Fukue (17 January 2009). "Strategist puts stock in future of women". The Japan Times. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  3. ^ Yoshiaki Nohara (2014-01-21). "Goldman's Matsui Turns Abe to Womenomics for Japan Growth - Bloomberg Business". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2016-02-02.
  4. ^ "Q&A: Goldman's Matsui Says Survival Instinct Driving 'Womenomics' - Japan Real Time - WSJ". Blogs.wsj.com. 2015-04-23. Retrieved 2016-02-02.
  5. ^ Goldman Sachs’ Matsui Challenges ‘Myths’ of Womenomics. Yoko Sudo, Wall Street Journal, 10 July 2014. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  6. ^ "Kathy Matsui takes stock of Abe's 'womenomics' reforms ‹ Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion".
  7. ^ "Voice of Experience: Kathy Matsui, co-head of Economics, Commodities and Strategy (ECS) Research in Asia, chief Japan equity strategist, Goldman Sachs Japan". 20 August 2013.
  8. ^ "Women in finance: Kathy Matsui".
  9. ^ "» Kathy Matsui". Archived from the original on 2015-06-30. Retrieved 2016-02-02.
  10. ^ a b c d e Landry 2016.
  11. ^ a b c Fukue 2009.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nohara 2014.
  13. ^ The Nikkei staff 2014.
  14. ^ Sachs, Goldman. "Womenomics 5.0" (PDF).
  15. ^ Suzuki, Kenjiro (June 1, 2021). "'Womenomics' advocate Kathy Matsui debuts venture capital fund".

Works cited

External links

This page was last edited on 25 January 2024, at 19:54
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