OPINION
Asia

Entrepreneurship in China: the rise of female billionaires

Most of the world’s richest women inherited their wealth, but of those who can be considered self-made, almost half hail from Greater China

Despite turbulent markets and the Covid-19 pandemic, a record 456 Chinese made the 2020 World’s Billionaires List, recently published by Forbes magazine.

What is particularly interesting is China’s cadre of self-made female billionaires who populate the list.

Most of the world’s richest women, such as Alice Walton and Francoise Bettencourt Meyers, inherited their wealth. Of the 234 women on the list of 2,095 billionaires, only 67 are considered “self-made”, which Forbes describes as those who have built a company or established a fortune on their own. Almost half of them hail from Greater China: 28 from the mainland and five from Hong Kong. India, a country with a population comparable to China’s, has only two women who created billion-dollar fortunes.

So, how did China forge so many self-made female billionaires? Here a few clues.

Middle kingdom’s female billionaires

Currently, the world’s richest self-made woman is Zhong Huijuan, who chairs Chinese drugmaker Hansoh Pharmaceutical and is reportedly worth $16.3bn. She is followed by Wu Yajun, who made her $13.7bn fortune in real estate development after founding Longfor Properties in the 1990s. Third on the list is Lu Zhongfang, who co-founded a test preparation firm Offcn with her son, and has a net worth of $9.5bn.

Zhong, Wu and Lu represent a generation of women who are part of China’s new class of super-wealthy entrepreneurs. Most of those women are in their fifties or older. They witnessed the rough, turbulent time of Mao’s Cultural Revolution and experienced both the hardship and the opportunities when China opened its door to foreign investment in 1979. What often fuelled their entrepreneurial ambitions was their desire to make lives better for their children.

Their wealth comes mainly from manufacturing and real estate, but some increasingly pursue riskier opportunities in fintech, biotech and AI.

China’s economic miracle

After World War II, free enterprise was anathema in China. In the days of the Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong, capitalists were considered enemies of the state. Then Mao’s successor Deng Xiaoping had an idea: to become prosperous, China had to adopt some capitalist practices, while retaining its political ideology. Individual-owned enterprises were legalised in 1981, unleashing entrepreneurship and transforming China from an isolated agricultural society to a dynamic market economy.

China’s manufacturing boom in Shenzhen and other special economic zones, which were allowed to experiment with capitalism, afforded women new job opportunities that they did not have before. Many successful female entrepreneurs rose from the factory floor, overcoming extraordinary circumstances.

Persisting through hardship

Working long hours is an unwritten rule in China. Last year, Alibaba’s co-founder Jack Ma, writing on a Chinese social media site Weibo, defended the “996” work culture in the tech industry, in which employees are expected to be in the office from 9 am to 9 pm, six days a week.

Like their male counterparts, female founders often work past midnight. This goes back to the Confucian work ethic, one aspect of which is chi ku — the act of persisting through hardship. Those values like working to exhaustion, are the unique characteristics of Chinese entrepreneurs both in mainland China and overseas.

Another important aspect of Confucianism, which some credit for China’s economic success, is individual sacrifice for the benefit of family, home town or employer.

Continuous learning

At the start of the Cultural Revolution, all schools in China were shut down, with some universities staying closed until Mao’s death in 1976. Those who could have been educated during that period are considered the lost generation.

Some female billionaires never went to college, but that didn’t stop them from learning. Education is highly valued in China. As they grow their ventures, Chinese founders continue to upgrade their skills to keep up with their evolving roles. That is why executive MBA programmes are in great demand and have become the crown jewel of Chinese business schools.

Networking and guanxi

In China, personal networks — or guanxi — are critically important to new venture success. Guanxi can be defined as the connections that are defined by reciprocity and mutual obligation and are grounded in trust and shared experiences.

Entrepreneurs operating in China must deal with a wide range of stakeholder groups, including key government officials and local community leaders. Female founders excel at that. They tend to be more holistic in their thinking. They place more emphasis on their relationships with all key stakeholders and often hold nominal positions in local or central government.

Business family

Equally important as guanxi is the notion of “business family”. In traditional Chinese culture, the family serves as the basis for all types of organisations. Even though the family-based model of business is not exclusive to ventures headed by female billionaires, it is critical to understanding the inner workings of Chinese firms, both large and small. The ancient practice of thinking of business in terms of family is not only a professionally and financially responsible thing to do within the Chinese economic context, but it also makes the head of the firm more approachable to her employees. In addition, in a typical business family the organisational structure is streamlined to cut red tape and facilitate fast decision-making.

China’s progress towards modernisation and marketisation gave women unprecedented career opportunities, empowering them to launch private enterprises and make fortunes in the process.

However, it would be a mistake to assume that in the past Chinese women were powerless and subservient to men, as they are often depicted in the West. In fact, in Chinese the word for “wife” is pronounced “qi”, which means “equal”.  In the Chinese tradition, women are accustomed to wielding significant power and influence, even though it may sometimes go under the radar.

Ming-Jer Chen is the Leslie E. Grayson Professor of Business Administration at the Darden School of Business, University of Virginia

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