Some women certainly have a source of power unique to their times. But Chinese women obviously don't have "all" the power, or even most of the power, otherwise they wouldn't be making less than 2/3rds of the income of men (less than 1/2 in rural areas), and more women would be in political and economic leadership positions. (To be fair, Communism deserves some credit as communist countries historically were ahead of their Capitalist counterparts wrt gender equality. And I'd be the shift back to market economics--and traditional social mores--partially reversed some of that change.)
Also, the female population in China is 48.6%. The average marrying age for women is now about 25 years. The one child policy was loosened up long enough ago that the gender imbalance bubble is passing or has already passed for young couples.
Though I suppose the social effect will probably last longer, like the way the effect the Cultural Revolution and One Child Policy changed the way seniors behaved toward young people. (When I visited Shanghai the elderly would still give up their seat for teenagers and twenty-somethings. The post hoc rationalization these days is because the young person is presumably tired from working so hard, but that's obviously a cultural version of the "polite lie" people tell themselves to hide the real reasons something is happening.)
Also, the female population in China is 48.6%. The average marrying age for women is now about 25 years. The one child policy was loosened up long enough ago that the gender imbalance bubble is passing or has already passed for young couples.
Though I suppose the social effect will probably last longer, like the way the effect the Cultural Revolution and One Child Policy changed the way seniors behaved toward young people. (When I visited Shanghai the elderly would still give up their seat for teenagers and twenty-somethings. The post hoc rationalization these days is because the young person is presumably tired from working so hard, but that's obviously a cultural version of the "polite lie" people tell themselves to hide the real reasons something is happening.)