If we go more into detail of STEM, its beef is engineering and computer science. Men account for their 80% of graduation, women only 20%.
The data I am using is from 2016, a few years old. But this pattern - in which females received higher percentages of bachelor’s degrees overall but lower percentages of bachelor’s degrees in STEM fields, was observed across all the time, across country/culture and racial/ethnic groups. When I was undergraduate in 1980s' in China, my field (STEM) in my class only had 7 women out of total 64 students. The dept chair hailed our class as the best freshmen class in last 4 years in term of women/men ratio. But if you go to Non-Stem field, such as literature or English, the reverse was true. It is just that because China limited its Non-STEM field enrollment, the percentage of total Non-STEM students is much lower than that of U.S.
I have no opinion on Business (finance, marketing...) field because it was new in China in my college days and it belonged to post-graduate education then.