Women lagging behind in financial services
A report on global financial services organisations has found slow progress for women leaders and at the current rate female representation at executive committee level will only hit 30% in 2048.
Globally only one-fifth of boards and 16 percent of executive committees in financial services are comprised of women, according to the Women in Financial Services report by global management consultancy, Oliver Wyman. This is only a slight improvement in both categories since the report was last published in 2014.
It says female executives are more likely to leave their employer at mid-career in financial services than any other industry
Areas of particular concern include Germany and Switzerland, asset management and risk functions.
Oliver Wyman notes that at current progress it will take a further 30 years (by 2048) for Executive Committees in the financial services industry globally to reach 30 percent female representation; the level at which research suggests a minority’s voice comes to be heard in its own right. Currently, women have the highest representation on executive committees in Norway and Sweden, with Japan and South Korea needing the greatest improvement.
The report includes an analysis of 381 financial services organizations in 32 countries, a survey of 850 financial services professionals around the world and interviews of more than 100 senior female and male leaders.
Ted Moynihan, managing partner of Financial Services, Oliver Wyman, said: “The industry is far from where it should be on gender balance. We hope that this second report will advance the discussion – delving deeper into it, raising awareness and supporting much needed change in the industry.”
“The low representation of women on executive committees in particular is a problem. An organisation’s key business and strategic decisions are made by its executive committee and they are also highly visible, both internally and externally, making them effective as role models and sponsors – and driving business success”.
Of additional concern, female executives in financial services are 20-30 percent more likely to leave their employer than their peers in other industries. The data and responses suggest that many women face a mid-career conflict and a less attractive ‘career trade off’ than men – with insufficient flexible working hours and support for family responsibilities, persistent views of shortcoming regarding promotion and equal pay, and unconscious bias.
Astrid Jaekel, Partner and author of the report, said: “Diversity must be seen as a commercial imperative rather than just as part of corporate social responsibility or fairness in the workplace.”