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Honda Names First Female Operating Officer

Japan-based Honda named its first female operating officer as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pushes for more women to take leadership positions.

The Honda logo is seen during a press preview at the North American International Auto Show January 14, 2014 in Detroit, Michigan. AFP PHOTO/Stan HONDA (Photo credit should read STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images)

Japan is notorious for having few women in business: a recent study found that women hold just 3% of executive positions there.

But on Tuesday, Japan-based Honda Motor Co. announced it will appoint its first female operating officer—a landmark appointment in a country where Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has made the empowerment of female workers a main plank in his economic growth strategy.

The newly appointed operating officer, Asako Suzuki, will take over the senior executive position in April. According to the Wall Street Journal, she’ll be Honda’s first female senior executive to be internally promoted. Her appointment was announced in the context of a larger reshuffling at the top of Honda: an executive vice president, directors, other operating officers, and corporate auditors were also named.

The Japanese government has long pushed for women to make up 30% of corporate leadership roles by 2020; in December, Abe reduced that goal to 7% by 2021 after companies made little progress, according to Quartz. Around 60% of women quit the workplace after having their first child, Bloomberg reported, often due to the stigma associated with pregnancy.