The World Economic Forum has revealed which countries have made progress with closing the gender gap – and that Japan is falling behind.
A report from the World Economic Forum has assessed levels of gender parity in 146 countries around the world, with Japan falling nine places in the rankings from 2022-2023.
The Global Gender Gap Report 2023 is the longest-standing index tracking the progress of countries’ efforts towards closing the gender gap over time.
First launched in 2006, the report benchmarks the existing and evolving gender parity of each country based on four key metrics. These are economic participation and opportunity; educational attainment; health and survival and political empowerment.
The 2023 findings reveal that in Japan, women are less represented in politics than they are in Saudi Arabia or Kuwait. Japan was ranked 138th in the world in terms of political empowerment – ahead of only eight countries, including Myanmar, Iran and Afghanistan, and one place below Saudi Arabia.
Overall, Japan ranked 125th, nine places lower than 2022, prompting the nation’s leaders to take action. “We need to humbly accept our country’s current situation,” said Hirokazu Matsuno, Japan’s chief cabinet secretary told The Times. “The government as a whole will aggressively push forward efforts.”
The Global Gender Gap Report also found that in 2023, global gender parity has recovered to pre-Covid levels. but the succession of crises has slowed progress. Overall the global gender gap has closed by 0.3 percentage points compared to 2022.
“While there have been encouraging signs of recovery to pre-pandemic levels, women continue to bear the brunt of the current cost of living crisis and labour market disruptions,” said Saadia Zahidi, managing director of the World Economic Forum. “An economic rebound requires the full power of creativity and diverse ideas and skills. We cannot afford to lose momentum on women’s economic participation and opportunity.”
Iceland was ranked as the most gender-equal country in the world in 2023 for the 14th consecutive year. It is also the only country to have closed more than 90 per cent of its gender gap. No country has yet achieved full gender parity, but the top nine ranking countries have closed at least 80 per cent of their gender gap.
The top ten countries for gender equality