BEIJING, May 11, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Zhaopin Limited (NYSE: ZPIN) ("Zhaopin" or the "Company"), a leading career platform[1] in China focused on connecting users with relevant job opportunities throughout their career lifecycle, today released its 2017 report on the current situation of working mothers in China. The report found that women in the workplace were less keen to have children because of work pressure and rising expenses.
Zhaopin conducted its 2017 survey of working mothers to understand their childbearing intentions, the impact of childbearing on career development, and benefits and provisions for raising babies. More than 40,200 people participated in this survey this year.
Highlights of Zhaopin's 2017 report on working mothers:
For working women with no children, 40.1% were reluctant to have children, almost double the 20.48% figure for last year. For women who already have one child, 62.7% didn't want to have a second child.
The top reasons for reluctance to have children were "not enough time and energy" (41.9%), "too expensive to raise children" (36.9%), and "concerns over career development" (35.2%).
About 63.4% of women in the workplace believed that childbearing would have a large impact on their career development, compared with only 48.6% of men who believed so.
Before childbearing, women in the workplace were more concerned about salary (76.5%), work environment (46.4%), and distance from work (45.9%) when selecting employers. After childbearing, working mothers gave priority to distance from work (81.0%), salary (68.7%), and work pressure (49.7%).
After returning to work, the needs of working mothers included flexible working hours (70.5%), family first after work hours (62.1%), and higher salaries (41.1%).
About 32.5% of women saw that their salaries decline after childbearing in 2017, compared with 24.2% for 2016. Meanwhile, 36.1% of women found that their positions were lowered after childbearing in 2017, up from 26.6% in 2016.
About 66.0% of working mothers felt depressed after childbearing. 65.3% believed that returning to work would relieve the depression, while 13.8% said that going back to work actually deepened their depression.
For women in the workplace, their biggest concerns about childbearing were difficulty in returning to work after childbearing (52.5%), and being replaced by others (48.9%).
The majority of working mothers (67.9%) in China would not consider becoming stay-at-home moms. Key reasons included psychological imbalance by isolation from society (79.0%), pressure from life (65.4%), and negative impact on relationships (58.6%).
Low willingness for childbearing
In the Zhaopin survey this year, nearly 50% of female participants had no children, 43.3% had one child and 7% had two or more children.
Childbearing status of women in the workplace
No child
49.7%
One child
43.3%
Two or more children
7.0%
Among women with no children, 40.1% were reluctant to have children at the moment, almost double the 20.48% figure for last year.
Childbearing intention of women without children
Reluctant to have a child at the moment
40.1%
Willing to have children
59.9%
The top reasons for reluctance to have children were "not enough time and energy" (41.9%), "too expensive to raise children" (36.9%), and "concerns over career development" (35.2%)
Reasons for reluctance to have children
Not enough time and energy
41.9%
Too expensive to raise children
36.9%
Concerns over career development
35.2%
Worrying about pains in pregnancy and childbirth
25.9%
Still renting apartment and cannot afford to buy one
24.8%
No confidence in marriage
21.5%
Cannot afford to buy a new apartment (bigger or with school quota)
10.4%
Among women who already have one child, 62.7% didn't want to have a second child, while 22.5% intended to have a second baby.
Intention for second child among women with one child
No intention for second child
62.7%
Want to have second child
22.5%
Have not thought about second child
14.8%
Impact of childbearing on career development
About 63.4% of women in the workplace believe that childbearing would have a large impact on their career development, compared with only 48.6% of men who believed so.
Impact of childbearing on career development
Women
Men
Big impact
63.4%
48.6%
Moderate impact
30.8%
41.9%
No impact
5.8%
9.4%
For women in different age groups, those born in the 1980s saw the most impact on their career development from childbearing, followed by women born in the 1990s.
Impact of childbearing on career development to women
in different age groups
Big impact
Moderate impact
No impact
Born after 1995
50.9%
41.1%
8.0%
Born in 1990s
56.5%
37.3%
6.2%
Born in 1980s
64.0%
30.0%
6.0%
Born in 1970s
52.7%
35.7%
11.6%
Born in 1960s
36.8%
38.4%
24.8%
Zhaopin's survey found that 32.5% of women saw their salaries decline after childbearing in 2017, compared with 24.2% for 2016.
Salary changes for women after childbearing
2017
2016
Salary increased
6.7%
4.3%
Salary declined
32.5%
24.2%
No change
60.8%
71.5%
About 36.1% of women found that their positions were lowered after childbearing in 2017, up from 26.6% in 2016.
Position changes for women after childbearing
2017
2016
Promoted to higher positions
5.9%
4.3%
Positions lowered
36.1%
26.6%
No change
58.0%
69.1%
For women in the workplace, their biggest concerns about childbearing were difficulty in returning to work after childbearing (52.5%), positions replaced by others (48.9%) and lowered personal value (46.6%).
Major concerns for women during childbearing
Difficulty in returning to work after childbearing
52.5%
Positions replaced by others
48.9%
Lowered personal value
46.6%
Difficulty in promotions and salary raises
41.1%
Others
10.1%
After returning to work, the needs of working mothers included flexible working hours (70.5%), family first after work hours (62.1%), and higher salaries (41.1%).
Needs of working mothers after childbearing
Flexible working hours
70.5%
Family first after work hours
62.1%
Higher salaries
41.1%
Do the work they enjoy
40.2%
Less work pressure
35.9%
Higher positions
13.9%
Working mothers were more occupied with children and family, which would hold back their career development, the Zhaopin survey found. Working mothers were primarily worried about children's education (68.0%), children's health (64.8%) and pressure from daily expenses (51.0%).
Factors affecting working mothers' career development
Children's education
68.0%
children's health
64.8%
Pressure from daily expenses
51.0%
Emotion problems from family lives
50.7%
Household chores
46.2%
Others
5.2%
Before childbearing, women in the workplace were more concerned about salary (76.5%), work environment (46.4%), and distance from work (45.9%) when selecting employers. After childbearing, working mothers gave priority to distance from work (81.0%), salary (68.7%), and work pressure (49.7%).
Factors in selecting employers before and after childbearing
Before
After
Salary
76.5%
68.7%
Work environment
46.4%
31.4%
Distance from work
45.9%
81.0%
Position
33.2%
16.8%
Work pressure
26.1%
49.7%
Industry
23.2%
12.4%
Style of the boss
19.0%
15.1%
Others
1.5%
1.4%
After returning to work, 46.3% of working mothers already changed jobs, and 38.9% had the intention to change jobs without action yet.
Job hopping intention after childbearing
Already changed jobs
46.3%
Wanted to change jobs, but no actions yet
38.9%
No intention to change jobs
14.8%
For career decisions after childbearing, 77.1% of working mothers would change jobs because work was too far away from home, and 38.6% would refuse challenging jobs for family reasons.
Career decisions after childbearing
Changing jobs as work too far away from home
77.1%
Refusing challenging work due to family reasons
38.6%
Engaging in work related to children
20.1%
Others
12.4%
Support for working mothers
Zhaopin's survey found that 66.0% of working mothers felt depressed after childbearing.
Depression after childbearing
Yes
66.0%
No
22.4%
Not sure
11.6%
About 65.3% of working mothers believed that returning to work would relieve the depression, while 13.8% said that going back to work actually deepened their depression.
Effect of returning to work on depression
Help relieve depression
65.3%
No help
7.7%
Deepen depression
13.8%
Not sure
13.2%
The benefits for nursing mothers in the workplace in China included one-hour off for breastfeeding each day, no termination of employment contract, no business trips and no over time. More men (41.9%) than women (28.3%) believed that their employers did not provide any benefits for nursing mothers because men often ignored or paid little attention to such benefits offered to nursing mothers.
Benefits for nursing mothers
Women
Men
One-hour off for breastfeeding each day
45.0%
34.3%
No termination for employment contract
33.0%
39.2%
No business trips
29.5%
20.2%
No over time
29.2%
45.6%
No night shift
24.9%
38.3%
Provide breastfeeding rooms
10.4%
14.5%
Extra subsidies
6.4%
17.8%
No benefits at all
28.3%
41.9%
As to suggestions for maternity leave, 48.6% of women in the workplace suggested extending the leave. 44.7% of women and 53.8% of men wanted to share maternity leave between parents, allowing fathers to take such leave. The survey found that men were more willing to take the responsibility to care for children and family.
Suggestions on maternity leave
Women
Men
Extend maternity leave
48.6%
36.6%
Sharing maternity leave between parents so fathers can take leave
44.7%
53.8%
No need for improvement
5.0%
6.0%
Shorten maternity leave
1.7%
3.6%
Zhaopin found that the majority of working mothers (67.9%) in China would not consider becoming stay-at-home moms.
Attitude towards stay-at-home moms
Would not consider
67.9%
Would consider
21.7%
Indifferent
10.4%
Key reasons that prevented working mothers from becoming stay-at-home moms included psychological imbalance by isolation from society (79.0%), pressure from life (65.4%), and negative impact on relationship (58.6%).
Reasons for not becoming stay-at-home moms
Psychological imbalance by isolation from society
79.0%
Pressure from life
65.4%
Negative impact on relationship
58.6%
Pursuit of career and dream
50.5%
No need for stay-at-home as children going to school
14.1%
Others
2.8%
About 60.2% of working mothers believed it was difficult to return to work, but they could manage to overcome the difficulty. Meanwhile, 27.3% believed it was difficult to go back to work and they would feel it hard to adjust.
Difficulty in returning to work for working mothers
Difficult, but can overcome
60.2%
Difficult, and hard to adjust
27.3%
Not difficult and easy to adjust
12.5%
About Zhaopin Limited
Zhaopin is a leading career platform in China, focusing on connecting users with relevant job opportunities throughout their career lifecycle. The Company's zhaopin.com website is the most popular career platform in China as measured by average daily unique visitors in each of the 12 months ended December 31, 2016, number of registered users as of December 31, 2016 and number of unique customers[2] for the three months ended December 31, 2016. The Company's over 129.5 million registered users include diverse and educated job seekers who are at various stages of their careers and are in demand by employers as a result of the general shortage of skilled and educated workers in China. In the fiscal year ended June 30, 2016, approximately 36.9 million job postings[3] were placed on Zhaopin's platform by 509,813 unique customers including multinational corporations, small and medium-sized enterprises and state-owned entities. The quality and quantity of Zhaopin's users and the resumes in the Company's database attract an increasing number of customers. This in turn leads to more users turning to Zhaopin as their primary recruitment and career- related services provider, creating strong network effects and significant entry barriers for potential competitors. For more information, please visit http://www.zhaopin.com.
Safe Harbor Statements
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India may already have overtaken China as the world’s most populous country, according to research by an independent Chinese demographer.
Yi Fuxian, a scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said Chinese officials had overestimated the number of births between 1990 and 2016 by almost 90m.
He attributed the alleged error partly to an overly optimistic fertility rate figure. China’s fertility rate was estimated at 1.6 children per woman in 2015, while Mr Yi believes it could be as low as 1.05.
If Mr Yi is correct, China’s population at the end of last year was 1.29bn, compared to the government’s official figure of 1.38bn. India’s population is officially estimated at 1.33bn.