Toronto Star

Women are on boards mostly only when required by law

Diversity advocates urged to shift focus from corporate world to lawmakers

- JEFF GREEN BLOOMBERG

SOUTHFIELD, MICH.— Diversity advocates have been trying for two decades to sell the corporate world on gender balance in the boardroom. Maybe they should be lobbying lawmakers instead. A new study by Egon Zehnder points out that among coun- tries that average three or more women on large company boards — thought to be the threshold at which diversity starts to yield higher returns — all but one operate under government-mandated quota systems.

“When we look at the board seats that have turned over, only about a quarter of them are filled by women,” said Cynthia Soledad, a co-leader of the Egon Zehnder diversity council and one of the authors of the study. “It needs to be more than an intellectu­al exercise or a philosophi­cal alignment that diversity is good and diversity would benefit us.”

In the U.S., big companies have on average 2.5 female di- rectors, and representa­tion has barely increased since 2012, Soledad said. There’s no national requiremen­t for having women on the board, though California passed a law requiring at least one woman on boards with headquarte­rs in the state by 2019 and three on most of those boards by 2021.

For boards to add more wom- en, they’re going to have to expand the universe beyond CEOs and directors, Soledad said. Some companies have been willing to appoint women who have never served on a board, most don’t, she said. That rules out most women, who make up just 3.7 per cent of CEOs among the 44 companies tracked in the study.

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