The Citizen (KZN)

Women are on board in Africa

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Africa, a continent blighted by the world’s highest maternal mortality rate and scant legal protection for women, beats all other regions globally in the proportion of females on company boards.

In Africa, one in four board members are female. That’s better than second-placed Europe at 23% and well ahead of global laggard Latin America at 7%, according to a report on gender parity released by the McKinsey Global Institute yesterday.

The world average for female representa­tion on boards is 17%. Representa­tion on executive committees in Africa is lower than on boards, at 22%, but above the global average of 21%.

Still, the advance has been led by progress in only a handful of African nations and women disproport­ionately occupy leadership roles in human resources and legal department­s, jobs that are seen as less likely to lead to the position of chief executive officer, McKinsey said in the report titled The Power of Parity – Advancing women’s equality in Africa.

“A number of reality checks are necessary,” McKinsey said. “Only a relatively small number of economies – namely Botswana, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and South Africa – have made headway.”

Africa’s performanc­e has been less stellar, but still not out of step with other regions.

At 76%, its workforce participat­ion rate is above the world average of 64% and only behind western Europe and the eastern Europe and central Asia region.

But it’s below the global average on formal employment and representa­tion in profession­al and technical jobs.

Women also do relatively well in Africa in terms of political representa­tion. With 25% of political representa­tives being women, Africa is ahead of the global average of 21%. The continent’s best performers are Rwanda, South Africa and Ethiopia.

Outside of the workplace, African women are far more disadvanta­ged, with significan­t inequality in their role in society and the legal protection available to them.

Even so, the picture is a mixed one, reflecting a range of experience across a continent with 54 nations and more than one billion people.

“Countries in southern Africa perform relatively well on women’s education and also have a low incidence of child marriage,” McKinsey said. “This is not the case in west and central Africa.”

Across all measures in the 39 African countries that McKinsey could obtain data for, South Africa, with a gender parity score of 0.76, is the best place to be a woman. – Bloomberg

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