What Merkel, The Belated Feminist, Did For Women

What Merkel, the belated feminist, did for women

Frankfurt, Sept 21 (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 21st Sep, 2021 ) :As Germany's first female chancellor, Angela Merkel smashed the glass ceiling and became a leading player in global politics.

But only now, at the end of her 16 years in office, has she declared herself a feminist -- too little too late for some in Germany.

In 2017, Merkel was at a rare loss for words when she was asked if she was a feminist, and dodged the question.

But earlier this month, during a joint interview with Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Merkel was less coy. "I am a feminist," she said.

Merkel, who is bowing out of politics after Germany's September 26 election, admitted she had been "shy" about the label but said her thinking on the issue had evolved.

"Essentially, it's about the fact that men and women are equal," the 67-year-old said.

Ines Kappert, head of the Gunda Werner Institute for Feminism and Gender Democracy in Berlin, called Merkel's belated realisation "a slap in the face" for women.

"She had 16 years to listen to feminists and improve the situation of women in Germany and she decided not to," Kappert told AFP.

While Merkel's career "deserves respect", Kappert said the chancellor failed to make structural changes for women in German society.

Germany's gender pay gap remains among the highest in the European Union and stood at 19 percent in 2019, not least because many German women work part-time.

- Eye roll - Merkel's conservative CDU-CSU bloc has resisted a long-standing feminist plea to reform Germany's tax system for married couples, which makes it less attractive for the lower-earning spouse, usually the woman, to work full-time.

Merkel's cabinet only last year agreed to a mandatory quota for women on management boards, a reform spearheaded by her coalition partner, the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD).

A law on gender wage transparency was meanwhile passed after much conservative foot-dragging.

And there are now fewer female lawmakers in the Bundestag lower house of parliament than earlier in the Merkel era, falling from a peak of around 36 percent in 2013 to 31 percent today.

"Merkel discovered feminism late in her tenure," said Sudha David-Wilp, deputy director of the German Marshall Fund think tank in Berlin.

"Perhaps she didn't notice being one of the few women on the global stage all these years since she had her nose to the grindstone working out one crisis after another." The no-nonsense chancellor is famed for holding her own against the likes of Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Donald Trump -- only the occasional eye roll hinting at exasperation with macho posturing or mansplaining attempts.

"She showed that women can do power jobs well and that women can serve the country," said Kappert.

In the twilight of her reign, Merkel has spoken more frequently about women's rights and her own experiences.