Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Women occupy a third of roles in financial firm boards’

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THE proportion of women on the boards of Britain’s top financial firms has risen to nearly a third in the past five years, a new report found on Monday (19).

The improvemen­t is a result of government initiative­s to improve gender balance in the sector, the study added. Since the launch of the HM Treasury Women in Finance Charter in March 2016, the number of women on the board of companies rose to 32 per cent from 23 per cent, thinktank New Financial said in a review of the charter’s impact.

Female representa­tion on executive committees, meanwhile, increased to 22 per cent from 14 per cent, it added.

Based on the current rate of change, women could reach parity in the boardroom in 2029 and on executive committees in 2033.

“While female representa­tion is moving in the right direction, there is still a long way to go,” said Yasmine Chinwala, partner at New Financial and co-author of the report. “If the industry is to maintain the pace of change in the next half-decade, it will have to take on the tougher challenges.”

Among them are the need to build a pipeline of female talent, ensure accountabi­lity is taken across the organisati­on and to develop more women in revenuegen­erating roles.

“Over the next five years, we need to move from talk to action, from working in isolation to working together, and move from a narrow perception of gender diversity to encompass women from every walk of life and every part of society,” said Amanda Blanc, chief executive at British insurer Aviva.

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