Lecture Note
Gender Diversity Index Key Findings
Gender Diversity Index Key Findings
Big Companies Get it. Small Companies Don’t.
Of the 2835 active
R3000
companies, women now hold 17.7% of the board seats, an increase
from 16.0% in 2017 when there were 2871 active companies. In 2018, the percentage of
women in the largest
R100
companies is 25.3%; in the smaller
R2001- 3000
companies it’s
13.0%, demonstrating that smaller companies are less diverse.
W Companies Increase, Z Companies Decrease. Half of R3000 Have One or No Women.
Forty-three percent of the
R3000
companies are W companies, with 20% or more of their board
seats held by women, up from 37% in 2017. The number of Z companies, those with no women
on their boards, fell to 17% from 22% in 2017. Despite these improvements, 50%
of
R3000
companies still have one or no women on their boards.
Women Gain Board Seats, Men Are Losing Them.
In looking at trends from the 2629 companies that are on both the
R3000
in 2018 and 2017,
women gained 469 board seats (net) while men lost 382 board seats (net). Sixty-three percent
of the companies that added women did so by adding board seats rather than replacing men
Industry Sectors Show Progress.
Women now hold more than 20% of the board seats in two industrial sectors: Services and
Utilities. In 2017, Utilities was the only sector with 20% or more female directors. All sectors
improved the percentage of women directors.
Four States Exceed Goal.
Four of the top 26 states ranked by board diversity exceed the 20% women on boards goal in
2018, up from one state in 2017. These states are Connecticut, Michigan, Minnesota and
Washington. Only Minnesota exceeded the goal in 2017.
Board Diversity at IPOs Continues to Disappoint.
Women hold just 9.2% of the board seats in the largest 25 IPO companies in 2017, up from
8.2% women in 2016, but below the 4-year average of 9.4%. Twelve of the 25 companies went
public with no women, and 80% went public with none or only one woman on their boards.
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