1 / 37

Cross-Cultural Gender Issues France, US, China

Cross-Cultural Gender Issues France, US, China. Presented by Group 2A Justin Sin Yoann Loy Nami Higashira Yingshu Jin Lynn Tan. General Information of China. The third largest country in the world: - next to Canada and Russia Employment in China:

bussard
Télécharger la présentation

Cross-Cultural Gender Issues France, US, China

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cross-Cultural Gender IssuesFrance, US, China Presented by Group 2A Justin Sin Yoann Loy Nami Higashira Yingshu Jin Lynn Tan

  2. General Information of China • The third largest country in the world: - next to Canada and Russia • Employment in China: - Female employment increased from 291 million in 1990 to 337 million in 2003 Source: XINHUANET, Beijing

  3. Airline Industry in China • Both Boeing and Airbus sell aircraft to China • Chinese market is important for both companies • China’s airline industry is growing • However, gender inequality is still a serious problem in China • Men earn more than women for doing the same types of work Source:http://www.cen-chemjobs.org/employer/chemhr/NovDec03/womenexpatspr.html

  4. The Most Common Beliefs For MNCs • Women do not want to be international managers • Women in dual-career marriages are poor candidates for overseas assignments • Foreigners’ unwillingness to accept women as managers Source:http://www.expatexchange.com/lib.cfm?articleID=937&start=1742&page=1

  5. Barriers to Female in International Assignments • External barriers - HR managers unwilling to select female candidates - Selector have stereotypes will influence decisions • Self-established barriers - Women have limited willingness to relocate - Women are often a barrier to their own careers Source: International Human Resource Management 4th Edition

  6. France’s General Facts • Population: 60,424,213 • Capital City: Paris • Major cities: Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse. • Language: French • Land: 547,030 sq km

  7. Political Overview of France • Midst of transition, from a well-to-do modern economy to one that relies more on market mechanisms • government retains controlling stakes in several leading firms • Social capitalism rules • GDP: $1.661 trillion • GDP Per Capita: $27,600 • Unemployment Rate: 9.7%

  8. Gender issues in France

  9. Paradox approach on gender issues • After 20 years of mass unemployment, despite all the forecasts, the number of working women continues to rise • But at the same time, inequalities are also rising between men and women wages • Gender pay gap between male and female is 22% nowadays, whereas it was only 15% in the 70’s for new careers • Why this difference? It depends of the career. Men tend to occupy full time functions whereas women tend to have part time jobs

  10. Paradox approach on gender issues (cont) • France tend to have more a feminine culture, compared to Western Societies • How women are perceived? - North/South different perceptions • Typical French Women: « mothers of intervention » type

  11. Male and Female expatriates Trends (France) • France-Expatriés Survey: - Male expatriates: 48% - Female expatriates: 52% • Where are they located? - Western Europe: 50.5% - North America: 12.8% - Francophon Africa: 10%

  12. HRM & IRHM Practices in France • Policies and strategies • Selecting, recuiting, placement • Cultural orientation • Training: cultural awareness programs and language oriented training • Performance management Source: IHRM 4th edition

  13. Europe Movement • Achieve female employment rate from 53% to 60% by 2010 • Recruit more female executives • Gender balance for employment • Neither sex should be over 60%

  14. France Movement • Presence of women in decision-making positions (December 2000) • Economic and Social Council • “Gender Equality and Gender Balance in Workforce Composition” (April 2004) • Signed by France’s main employer’s organizations and trade union confederations

  15. National Action Plans for Employment (2003)

  16. Base in Toulouse, France • European operations in France, Germany, Spain, UK • Main subsidiaries; Airbus North America, Airbus China, Airbus Japan, Airbus Transport International (Source: www.airbus.com)

  17. Male Dominated Industry, Airbus • Strongly promoting gender equality • Aircraft manufacturing business • Less female labor over all (lack of interest) • High positioned managers are mostly male • Vice executive presidents Management team of Airbus • President, vice president, chief executive officers • General managers • Subsidiary presidents

  18. Female Employees’ Life at Airbus • More visible and known, • Added challenges (senior engineer) • Respect from co-workers and business partners (supplier development) • Get treated no differently from the other men in the factory (engineer) (Source: Life at Airbus)

  19. Airbus China • Expatriates from Airbus France • Majority is male • Selection of expatriates to China issue • Asia-women are tended not universally employed 2002年11月06日8家供货商与空客中国公司的代表合影

  20. Recent Facts of Female in China Science & Technology Workers in China 2000 • Increasing number of female workers • Female play important role • Government promoting progress & development of women (Source: Chinese Statistic Annals of 2000)

  21. Findings from Airbus • Gender issues still exist • Enforcing Equal Opportunity in France and China • Employing more female • Finding suitable female will be challenge because of the industry

  22. Language: English, Spanish (spoken by a sizable minority) Land: 9,161,923 sq km Population: 293,027,571 (July 2004 est.) GDP: $10.99 trillion (2003 est.) GDP Per Capita: $37,800 (2003 est.) United States

  23. Population and Employment Comparison

  24. HRM & IHRM Practices in the U.S. • With globalization more HR activities • Human resource planning • Recruitment, selection, placement • Performance management • Training and developing • Compensation and benefits Source: IHRM 4th edition

  25. Reasons for International Assignment • PricewaterhouseCoopers 2002 survey - Surveyed 273 companies from 17 countries - Use of expatriates would continue to grow in the future business

  26. Reasons for International Assignment (Cont) • Position filling - to fill a skills gap and technology transfer • Management development - training, development purposes, and to transfer common corporate values, send staff to other countries • Organization development - transfer knowledge, competence, and to exploit global market opportunities

  27. Male and Female Expatriates Trend (The U.S.) • ORC survey: - Male expatriates: 86% - Female expatriates: 14% • GMAC-GRS 2002 survey:

  28. Boeing (Source: http://www.boeing.com)

  29. Company’s Profile • Boeing has operations primary in U.S but also in: - Australia, Canada, China, Germany, Japan, Malaysia, U.K, United & Arab Emirates • Given Boeing commercial market problems the company focused on restructuring, choosing to place more emphasis on military (25%) and space segments (20%)

  30. Company’s Profile Cont’ • Employs: 157,000 in 70 countries and 48 states in the United States • Chairman: Lewis E. Platt, age 62; President and CEO: Harry C. Stonecipher, age 67 • Top Officers 70 - 4 female top officers, which is 5,7% • Many long-term & short-term expatriates activities - Women expatriates: 16% - Men expatriates: 84%

  31. Company Leadership In United States Office of the Chairman President and Chief Executive Officer Harry Stonecipher Non-executive Chairman Lewis Platt Business Unit Leaders President, Phantom Works Bob Krieger Executive Vice President President and CEO, Integrated Defense Systems Jim Albaugh Senior Vice President President, Connexion by BoeingSM Scott Carson Executive Vice President President and CEO, Commercial Airplanes Alan Mulally President, Boeing Capital Corporation Walt Skowronski President, Shared Services Group Rick Stephens Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Counsel Doug Bain Functional Leaders Senior Vice President, Communications Tod Hullin Executive Vice President, Internal Services Laurette Koellner Senior Vice President, International Relations Tom Pickering Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Bell Senior Vice President, Chief Technology Officer James Jamieson Senior Vice President, Washington, D.C Operations Rudy de Leon

  32. Gender discrimination In Boeing • Brought on behalf of 28,000 Boeing women, the lawsuit claims the company systematically paid women less than men • Women who filed a lawsuit - Terri Wertz - Patti Anderson - Cheryl Lee Persinger - Kathis William

  33. Pay Disparities In Boeing • Boeing has been aware of the pay disparities since 1994 • In 1997, Boeing created a Diversity Salary Assessment team - to examine its compensation and promotion practices - the power point presentation summarized that female paid less • In 1999, the demographic salary analysis project showed that - Boeing needed to allocate about $30 million annually (salary adjustments) - However, Boeing allocated only $10 million (Source: April 26, 2004.Business Week)

  34. Female Expatriates in China • Gender issues exist in China - Job discrimination, wage differences, and regulations on a different retirement Caligiuri & Tung Study - Male and female expatriates perform equally

  35. Theory Of Rights • Is a concept of taking individual into account and doing good for every individual rather than a number of people • Boeing abused theory of rights by discriminating against a group of employee (ex. Women)

  36. Recommendation • Select the very best person regardless of gender • Notice each potential women expatriates' characteristics • Promote women expatriates • Prepare women expatriates • Support the entire family • Offer in-country support networks • Listen to women expatriates’ experiences

  37. THANK YOU ANY QUESTION?

More Related