By Winifred
Yu
The Wall Street Journal
©1985 Dow Jones & Co., Inc.
September 11, 1985
They've been tagged "the model minority." They often rise to the
top of their college classes and then earn recognition on the job as diligent
and dependable workers. Employers scramble to offer them technical positions.
But many Asian-Americans hoping to climb the corporate ladder face an arduous
ascent. Ironically, the same companies that pursue them for technical jobs often
shun them when filling managerial and executive positions. Because many of their
cultural values don't always mesh with those of an American corporation, they
are frequently victims of lingering stereotypes that depict them as passive and
self-effacing, with poor social and communications skills -- traits that would
rule them out as management material.
David Lam, for one, says he suspects he was denied a low-level management job
at Hewlett Packard Co. a few years ago because he is Asian-American. A valued
engineer at the electronics manufacturer for more than three years, he had
expressed an active interest in the position. But although most promotions at
the company are based on seniority, experience and performance, the job went to
a colleague, a Caucasian whom Mr. Lam had hired a year earlier. A spokesman for
Hewlett-Packard refused to comment about Mr. Lam's claim.
The problem, Mr. Lam believes, is twofold. "Part of it is there's strong
prejudice prevailing in the corporate world," he says. "The other half
is that Asians don't try hard enough to integrate."
Some management consultants also say that the prejudice has worsened with
Japan's growing role in several industrial and high-technology sectors
previously dominated by the U.S. All Asian-Americans, they say, are suffering
because of the resulting anti-Japanese sentiment.
Statistics compiled by the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
reflect the difficulty for Asian-Americans of moving into the ranks of
management. In the private sector last year, they constituted 8% of all
professionals and technicians but only 1.3% of managers and officials.
At the same time, however, interest in managerial jobs among Asian-Americans
appears to be rising. James Spain, executive director of the New York-based
Association for the Integration of Management, reports that they account for 12%
of the participants in his group's programs. Three years ago, he says, the
percentage was less than half that. And as interest increases, more evidence of
discrimination surfaces.
Jim Tso, a lawyer and president of the Organization of Chinese Americans, in
northern Virginia, sees the situation of Asian-Americans as a Catch-22. He feels
that the competence and dedication they show in low-level supervisory and
technical positions make American companies reluctant to promote them. "In
the past," he says, "we had the coolie who slaved; today we have the
high-tech coolie." A major U.S. bank sent Mr. Tso to the Far East as an
officer several years ago. But the bank refused to transfer him to a post he had
requested in Europe, explaining, "You're Asian, and you're better suited
for Asia." He quit.
A number of non-Asian executives in American companies use similar lines of
reasoning to justify their reluctance to promote Asians. A vice president of a
large Pittsburgh company, demanding anonymity, says he'd like to hire hundreds
more Asian-American technicians and researchers because they're "loyal and
hard workers." But he balks at promoting them into management spots, he
says, because the few who have landed such posts "have to have pats on the
back constantly."
And Thomas Campbell, a general manager at Westinghouse Electric Corp., says
that although Asian-Americans pressure themselves to enter management they would
be happier staying in technical fields. He believes that few of them are adept
at sorting through the complexities of big business here. Yet, when
Asian-Americans do enter management, he contends, their minority status can
become an asset. "If anything," he says, "they're given every
break under the sun. I feel they are given extra chances, a second or third look
we wouldn't normally give."
Many Asian-Americans, in contending with racial stereotypes, find that of
passivity to be the most frustrating. Terry Kuroda, now a vice president at
Securities Industry Automation Corp., says he shocked his colleagues at Merrill
Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc. a few years ago when he aggressively
offered to negotiate the purchase of an office computer package at a lower
price. The purchasing department hesitated initially, he says, because they
viewed him as simply "analytical and quiet." He persisted and
eventually saved the company about $30,000 a month on computer costs.
Some Asian-Americans say, though, that negative perceptions of them as
retiring individuals, however demeaning, have some basis in fact. Kung Lee Wang,
who started the Organization of Chinese Americans, says that Asians' cultural
heritage contributes to their modesty and often to a certain cliquishness.
"Asians think that what you achieve should be recognized, but you shouldn't
brag," he says. "They are also more family-oriented and less socially
active with colleagues."
Mr. Wang is one of many Asian-Americans who feel that an American mentor is
necessary for advancement. He says that a supervisor at his former job with the
U.S. Bureau of Mines helped him get into a management program there. Eventually,
though, his career stalled, despite the fact that his work was considered
"more than satisfactory. You can't pinpoint discrimination," he says.
"It may have been bad luck that I didn't go farther." But he feels
that for promotion he "needed political pull and special mentors" that
he didn't have. He elected to take early retirement.
Kenneth Chang, a manager at Westinghouse, says that his friends are
"almost exclusively" of Chinese descent and that he prefers to spend
his time with them. He also considers his career opportunities limited and
envisions himself rising only one more level. To go higher, he says, he would
"have to attend cocktail parties and play golf."
Indeed, socializing with colleagues is essential to advancement in
management. But Asian-Americans are often unaware of its importance, says Landy
Eng, chairman of the Asian Business League. "The whole idea of networking
in a corporation and playing politics," he says, "isn't a value Asians
have."
Sun W. Chun, director of the Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center, feels that
Asian-Americans can acquire the requisite social skills. He says that when he
was a research engineer at Gulf Oil Corp. he devoted much time to
"increasing his exposure." He participated in a seminar committee,
initiated a golf league in his division and joined several professional
organizations. "It's an important factor we have to learn," he says
about cultivating social contacts.
"If anybody is antisocial," he says, "certainly he or she will
be discriminated against -- not for what they look like, but for their social
behavior."
Despite the difficulties they encounter here, Asian-Americans still aspire to
fill management positions. But they don't do so merely to be put in charge of
their company's business in the Far East. Says Terry Kuroda, "We just want
to be like everyone else here, to handle business in the U.S."