http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/02/04/ri-moms-face-slower-career-growth.html

RI moms face slower career growth
Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Mon, February 04 2013, 
11:27 AM 

Paper Edition | Page: 14

A study says that 55 percent of Indonesian women report that having children 
has slowed their careers, versus 54 percent of respondents globally who said 
the opposite.

Saut Maria Santosa, a senior director at research firm Accenture Indonesia, 
said that women’s careers slowed as they turned down opportunities, such as 
promotions, that might interfere their roles in the family.

According to the survey, the percentage of women reporting that motherhood had 
slowed their careers was “still high”, leading to lost potential, as women, 
given their representation in the population, could collectively contribute 
more to the economy.

According to the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), women comprise 40.8 percent 
of the nation’s population while only comprising 38.2 percent of the nation’s 
work force of around 130 million people.

Meanwhile, 46 percent of respondents said that their careers did not weigh upon 
their family lives. “It comes down to how women manage and balance time between 
work and family,” Saut said.

The multitasking that women had to do was proof of their resilience, she added. 

The survey also said that 58 percent of respondents globally accepted more 
responsibility or different career roles after having children, demonstrating 
their flexibility in accepting new challenges. “As many as 40 percent of 
Indonesian women said that hard work was the main factor of career growth,” 
Saut said.

She added that culture was increasingly shifting in favor of women, reflected 
by the presence of more women executives. 

The shift was triggered in part by a need for both husbands and wives to work 
to support their household.

Seventy-seven percent of Indonesian respondents said that their spouses held 
full-time jobs, versus 73 percent globally.

“As women move to executive posts, the motivation to remain working is 
self-fulfillment. However, expenses do tend to rise in parallel with income,” 
Saut said.

Indonesian career women, more than their peers in Southeast Asia, have seized 
opportunities provided by employers for flexible work arrangements.

Saut said that the survey said that Indonesia was second in the number of women 
opting for flexible work arrangement schemes offered by enterprises. “This is a 
sign that Indonesia should become more familiar in ways to improve women’s 
engagement in the workforce,” she said.

Fifty-two percent of women surveyed said that they had applied for shared 
opportunities or split work with colleagues to create space in their work 
schedules, while another 44 percent opted for flexible work times. Thailand was 
first place at 48 percent in the number of respondents gravitating toward 
flexible work times. The global average was 34 percent.

According to Saut, women in Indonesia chose flexible work arrangements so they 
could find enough time for work and home duties, especially if they were still 
caring for young children.

She added that flexible work arrangement were not a new concept in the 
Indonesian workplace. Up to 42 percent of respondents said that they had signed 
up for flexible work arrangements in the past 1 or 3 years, with another 36 
percent saying that they had practiced such arrangements for more than 3 years.


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