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APEC vows to improve women’s economic empowerment

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The 2021 APEC Women and the Economy Forum calls for the strengthening of women’s economic empowerment especially in the post-pandemic era, appealing to provide more employment opportunities for women and to strengthen their education and professional skills training.

Ministers and officials in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) region renewed their commitment Friday to gender equality and women’s economic empowerment in creating conditions that will drive inclusive, effective and enduring economic growth after the COVID-19 pandemic subsides.

Addressing the significant and disproportionate impact of the pandemic on women and girls, ministers, officials and business leaders pledged to implement policies that will improve women’s access to capital and markets, strengthen women’s labor force participation, increase access to leadership positions and support women’s education, training and skills development.

Leading the discussion at the 2021 APEC Women and the Economy Forum, which was held virtually on Friday night, New Zealand Minister for Women Jan Tinetti called attention to how the pandemic has driven many women out of the workforce and negatively affected their well-being.

“We know that much of the essential work has been carried out by women, and that they have been crucial to our COVID response as scientists, healthcare professionals, educators and other essential workers,” Tinetti said. “We also know that women often carry out significant unpaid care responsibilities.”

According to the updated APEC Women and the Economy Dashboard, the shift to digital technologies during the pandemic has increased the burden of employed women who are working from home to shoulder the bulk of domestic tasks and care work.

Tinetti urged member economies to join together and take bold, collective actions to minimize the risk of COVID-19, which has set back years of hard-won progress. Members are united to intensify the collection, analyses, dissemination and usage of sex-disaggregated data to get more clarity about existing barriers and inform an effective response to backsliding.

“The current challenges present officials with a great opportunity to reset, change the status quo and enable women and girls to fulfill their potential, for the benefit of all,” added Tinetti, who chaired the forum on Friday.

“We know our economies stand to gain substantially from achieving our goals for women and girls, including by creating the conditions for greater productivity, prosperity, innovation and improved quality of life.”

Member economies agreed to carry out policies that enable and promote women’s participation in the formal economy by addressing gender-based pay gaps and occupational segregation as well as tackling discriminatory legal and regulatory barriers for women entrepreneurs and women-led small businesses.

2021 APEC Women and the Economy Forum New Zealand Venue in New Zealand, Sept. 24, 2021. (APEC/Handout via Xinhua)

Ministers also pledged to promote work-life balance and equal sharing of unpaid domestic work and care by exploring measures that expand affordable and accessible child and elder care facilities and access to social protection systems. Members will continue to share best practices incorporating technological and digital solutions, which can improve the ability to manage paid and unpaid work.

“The decisions and responses that we make now can lay the foundation for a stronger future for women and girls, and a more resilient, inclusive economy,” Tinetti noted.

Tinetti highlighted that while achieving equality is no easy task, gender-responsive policies and approaches are critical for effective, inclusive and sustainable growth, especially in the wake of the pandemic.

“Together, we can seize the opportunity before us to address long-standing structural barriers to women’s full and meaningful participation in the economy,” Tinetti concluded.

WELLINGTON, Sept. 26 (Xinhua)

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Macron warns Europe could die of three challenges

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PARIS, April 25 (Xinhua) — Europe could die of three challenges it faces in security, economy and culture, French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday in a speech on Europe at Sorbonne University in Paris.

Europe is in a situation of encirclement, pushed by many powers at its borders and sometimes within it, while some “uninhibited, regional powers” are showing their capabilities, he warned in a local live broadcast.

Macron also said that the European economic model as conceived today is no longer sustainable facing competition with the United States and China.

“In our Europe, our values, our culture are threatened,” he added, because Europe is experiencing “the cultural battle, the battle of the imaginary, of narratives, of values, which is increasingly delicate.”

This speech came seven years after his first speech on Europe at the university.

Source(s): Xinhua

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Government to reform SOEs and Aasandha system

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Minister of Finance Dr. Mohamed Shafeeq has announced plans to initiate a specialised corporate reform programme in response to concerns about the mismanagement of state-owned enterprises (SOEs).

Dr. Shafeeq emphasised the need for responsible governance within SOEs, noting that many are struggling to balance their expenditures with revenues.

Additionally, Minister Shafeeq highlighted the importance of strengthening SOEs, as only a few are generating substantial revenue for the state or serving the public effectively. He underscored the necessity for significant changes in the subsidy system and emphasised the importance of prudent spending and reducing overall expenditure. As part of this initiative, he emphasised the reform of the Aasandha system to ensure sustainability.

Furthermore, Minister Shafeeq expressed determination to implement reforms promptly, contrasting previous governments’ reluctance with President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu’s proactive stance. He affirmed the President’s commitment to reforming companies and finance without delay.

Earlier this year, President Dr. Muizzu unveiled policies aimed at transforming SOEs into profitable entities independent of state funding. The government aims to enhance corporate management and establish clear criteria for subsidies and capital allocation.

Source(s): PsmNews

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India should realize that the Maldives is not ‘taking sides,’ it’s choosing independence

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According to reports, the People’s National Congress party led by Maldives President Mohamed Muizzu won a landslide victory in Sunday’s parliamentary elections, securing 71 out of 93 seats. However, the result has made India feel nervous about the Maldives tilting away from it. Chinese analysts point out that the result of the Maldivian parliamentary elections reflects the will of the people. They assert that the Maldivian people are not choosing to lean toward China but rather they are supporting the government’s independent foreign policy.

Undoubtedly, the Maldives parliamentary elections are an internal matter for the Maldives, and China fully respects the choice made by the Maldivian people. However, some forces have malicious intentions regarding these elections.

Some Western media outlets took the opportunity to sensationalize the elections, claiming that the elections were a result of the so-called China-India geopolitical rivalry.

Furthermore, although China has never viewed the Maldives parliamentary elections as a geopolitical competition between China and other countries, some in India are worried about the Muizzu administration’s so-called pro-China and anti-India stance, viewing the Maldives elections as a zero-sum game between China and India. Some Indian media outlet even claimed that the Maldives is “tilting toward China and away from regional powerhouse and traditional benefactor India.”

India’s self-proclaimed attitude as a “benefactor” fully shows that it views South Asia as its “backyard.” Adopting a mind-set of exclusion rather than cooperation, India has always been skeptical of South Asian countries developing comprehensive cooperation with other powers. Some Indians view China’s normal cooperation with the Maldives with a cold war mentality, which is unhealthy.

The Maldives’ choice to break free from India’s control and become a truly independent country has dealt a heavy blow to India’s South Asian hegemonic mind-set. In fact, Muizzu won the Maldives presidential elections last year partially because New Delhi’s long-term pressure and interference in the Maldives’ internal affairs had sparked strong anti-India sentiment among the Maldivian people.

Liu Zongyi, secretary-general of the Research Center for China-South Asia Cooperation at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, told the Global Times that the result of the Maldives parliamentary elections not only demonstrates that the Maldivian people are no longer willing to follow India’s orders and have chosen an independent foreign policy, but also that they have chosen to prioritize rapid economic and social development.

In recent years, China’s economic cooperation with the Maldives has brought significant development to the Maldives in various aspects. For example, the China-Maldives Friendship Bridge, a flagship project of China’s infrastructure boom in the Maldives, is a symbol of the deep friendship between the two countries and has helped the Maldivian people realize their century-old dream.

India claims that its “Neighborhood First policy” is its core foreign policy. However, India’s aggressive behavior has turned “neighborhood first” into “India first.” The more the Indian government seeks to consolidate its hegemony in South Asia, the more discontent neighboring South Asian countries will grow with India.

India has long maintained a condescending attitude toward other South Asian countries, which is why India is increasingly unpopular in the region, said Qian Feng, director of the research department at the National Strategy Institute at Tsinghua University. India has not realized that the emergence of “anti-India” sentiment in these countries is not because they are “pro-China,” but because they are eager for independence.

The leaders of China and India have reached an important consensus that China and India are partners rather than rivals and are not threats to each other but opportunities for each other’s development. However, India has said one thing and done another in the process of implementing this consensus, according to Qian. On many issues, India demands and pressures its South Asian neighbors to take sides between it and China. This not only violates the sovereignty of these countries, potentially causing instability in the entire region, but it also distorts the China-India relationship.

The independent choices of other South Asian countries are not a “betrayal” to India but a fact that needs to be fully respected. Cooperation with China is not exclusive and does not affect relations with India. As an important country in the South Asia, India needs to adopt a more open attitude toward cooperation between regional countries and China.

Source(s): globaltimes.cn

The author is a reporter with the Global Times. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn

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