Chinese women economists who met Yellen called traitors online

The criticism mostly targeted two women who posted about their experience meeting US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Saturday. PHOTO: AFP

BEIJING – A group of Chinese female economists and entrepreneurs who dined with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen have been blasted by online nationalists for betraying their country by interacting with the United States official.

While the Treasury department skipped identifying attendees from the meeting on Saturday, a photograph of the gathering posted on China’s Twitter-like Weibo was used to identify some participants. It was not clear who first shared the image online.

“There’s no such thing as a free meal,” wrote international politics professor Shen Yi from Fudan University, who has over two million followers on the platform. “They’ll need to deliver KPIs in exchange,” he added, using the acronym for key performance indicators, implying the women would have to give something to the US government. 

The criticism mostly targeted two women who posted about their experience on social media: Ms Liu Qian, The Economist Group’s managing director for Greater China, and author Hao Jingfang, who previously worked for the China Development Research Foundation, which is managed by a branch of the State Council.  

In a now-deleted exchange, one Weibo user asked Ms Hao, whose award-winning novel Folding Beijing is widely considered to be about income inequality in the capital, why she attended the dinner.

Ms Hao replied: “Because Yellen is the friendliest American official, she’s always dedicated to developing friendly China-US relations.”

Several users accused Ms Hao of being an “American spy”, while a post that garnered some 600 comments criticised the elite status of the women selected, saying “they have not worked in factories”.

Dr Yellen’s exchange with women economists and entrepreneurs telegraphed the importance she places on female representation in elite decision-making.

During her four-day trip to Beijing to stabilise ties with America’s biggest rival, the Chinese government exclusively put forward male officials to meet the first woman to run the US Treasury, according to publicly available information.

Dr Yellen told the women: “I see it all the time when I’m almost the only woman in the room. I’m sure many of you have that same experience at decision-making tables.”

President Xi Jinping excluded women from China’s top leadership at 2022’s Congress for the first time in 25 years.

Furthermore, as China struggles with a record low birth rate, women are being encouraged to take on more traditional caregiving roles.

The backlash against the women echoes attacks waged by online nationalists against foreign female journalists of ethnic Chinese origin working for Western news organisations. 

The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China wrote in a report in 2022 on the issue: “Attackers routinely disparage their coverage of China and make crude sexual innuendos, including alarming threats of physical violence.”

The US Treasury said in a statement after Dr Yellen’s meeting: “Women’s participation in the workforce is one of the major drivers of creating inclusive growth.

“Women’s contributions to economics, in particular, are important to help ensure that economic research and policymaking appropriately reflect society’s priorities.” BLOOMBERG

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