Local elections in Japan produced just four female mayors of the 222 positions up for grabs, results showed today, underlining the challenges for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's pledge to put women in 30 percent of senior roles by 2020.
Nationwide there was an increase by one in the total number of female mayors and governors, to 26 of 1,788 posts after Sunday's polls.
Now two women are governors, and 24 are mayors -- 20 of whom were not up re-election this year.
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The elections, which also saw nearly 600 municipal assemblies elected, were the second wave after polls held earlier in the month.
They come four months after Abe won re-election as premier and as he continues to push the notion that Japan should be a place "where women can shine" -- a policy he has dubbed "womenomics".
That is part of his drive to re-invigorate the economy, partly by getting more of the nation's under-employed but highly educated women into the workforce.
But, say observers, the lopsided results show Abe's 30 per cent target for women occupying senior roles is still a long way off.
Despite its status as the world's third largest economy, Japan ranks 115th in a survey on the ratio of women in national parliaments below India, Malaysia and some African countries such as Zambia and Niger.