Business a.m.

What’s the Impact of More Diverse Corporate Boards?

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CALIFORNIA’S NEW LAW mandating female directors on company boards is intended to advance gender diversity and give women a bigger role in running firms. But will the law actually change how companies are run – and impact their balance sheets?

Wharton management professor Katherine Klein said she had “a mixed reaction” to the new law, which is the first of its kind in the U.S. “It’s good to have more women represente­d on boards for a variety of reasons,” she noted, adding that it is a positive move in advancing fairness to women and for women’s representa­tion. “The mixed part comes from the research evidence regarding women on boards, [which says that] changing the gender compositio­n of a board does nothing for company performanc­e. It doesn’t make it better; it doesn’t make it worse. There’s rhetoric in the legislatio­n that says companies are going to be better, perform better. When you look hard at the research evidence, there is no reason to believe that.”

But looking beyond earnings, does having more women make a difference in other ways? Annalisa Barrett, clinical professor of finance at the University of San Diego’s School of Business, noted that the legislatio­n also makes reference to “evidence that shows that there are many aspects of business performanc­e that do improve when there are diverse viewpoints around the boardroom table.” The law requires all publicly traded companies based in California to have at least one woman on their boards by the end of 2019. boards of directors will be required to have two or three that are female, depending on the total size of the board. Companies that don’t comply would face other states will follow suit with similar laws, others say the law could invite sig! ! part because it is intended to apply to all companies with headquarte­rs in California even if they are incorporat­ed elsewhere. Klein and Barrett discussed the implicatio­ns of the California bill on the Knowledge@Wharton. At last count, California had 761 publicly traded companies. Alphabet "# ! $ & ' book and Apple are among the prominent companies that would have to add at least one woman director by 2021, according to a Washington Post report. Others based in the state that already have three women directors include Walt Disney, Chevron, Oracle, HP and Twitter, the report added.

No Business Case

The bill cites a 2012 Credit Suisse report to show a correlatio­n between women on boards and improved performanc­e at companies. The six-year study covered 2,000 companies globally. Credit Suisse followed it up with a report that covered ( clear evidence that companies with a higher proportion of women in decisionma­king roles continue to generate higher returns on equity, while running more conservati­ve balance sheets,” the 2014 report said. “In fact, where women account for the majority in the top management, the businesses show superior ! ! ) returns on investment­s and lower leverage.” Klein said “there are hundreds of studies” on gender diversity, and that it would not be a good idea to “cherry *+ ! / ( / look at the meta analyses on these — which are statistica­lly rigorous efforts 5 : relationsh­ip between the diversity and the gender diversity on the board and company performanc­e. There is no business case for putting women on the board. There is no business case for putting men on the board. Gender has zero impact.”

Shaping Performanc­e by Picking CEOs

Both Klein and Barrett agreed, however, that having more women on company boards gives them a bigger say in key decisions. These include selecting a CEO, and ensuring that the CEO “is achieving strategic goals, that the company has a culture that is inclusive and is positive and does not lead to making risky decisions — all of which can be ) plans and the pay packages,” Barrett said. At the same time, “it’s important to understand that ;<= )/ence on the board compositio­n,” said Klein. “CEOs are either picking the people who are on their boards or they’re working closely with an independen­t board chair to pick people who are on the board. “The causal direction goes both ways,” Klein continued. “[If] you’re an enlightene­d CEO, and you care about pay equity and about inclusion, you’re likely to get board members who care about those. But if you don’t care about these, you’re not going to be that keen on having [someone who values them] join the board.” The role of the CEO in selecting board members has changed “most dramatical­ly in the last decade or decade-and-a-half,” Barrett noted. “Institutio­nal investors are pressuring companies to have board composi) brings diverse background­s, experience­s and expertise to the deliberati­ons that come to the board level.” The institutio­nal investors work toward those goals by conferring with the chairs of nominating and governance committees at their companies to ensure “robust processes” for identifyin­g independen­t board candidates, she added.

History of Initiative­s

A few European countries have similar laws requiring companies to have a minimum number of women on their boards. ' > ? and Spain have quotas of 40% for women on boards, while Germany has a 30% requiremen­t. In the U.S., too, several states including California and Pennsylvan­ia have over the years passed resolution­s urging publicly held companies to add more women to their boards. California passed such a resolution in 2013. Pennsylvan­ia passed its resolution in 2017, which called upon both public and private companies to allocate at least 30% of their board seats for women. However, such resolution­s are not legally enforceabl­e. In California, companies were slow to act after the resolution, and that prompted the latest bill, said Barrett. The 2013 resolution sought to have between one and three women directors on the boards of companies headquarte­red in the state. Barrett said a study she conducted found that in the three-year timeframe set by the resolution, only 20% of the companies headquarte­red in California had achieved those goals. That uninspirin­g outcome led the bill’s co-sponsor “to take the next step and move to binding legislatio­n in a mandated format as opposed to voluntary.” Barrett noted that the corporate community may have its reasons for not acting sooner on bringing greater women’s representa­tion on boards. The issue may not have come up on their agendas, or the companies may have found it difficult to find suitable director candidates to bring the desired diversity, she said. “Although there is progress being made on getting more women in the boardroom, it’s extremely slow. So the progress towards gender equity in the boardroom would take many decades to achieve.”

A Case for Tracking Performanc­e Barrett noted that the sponsors of the California bill maintain that their bid to ensure gender diversity on company boards “is not at the exclusion of other aspects of diversity,” though that has been one of the criticisms it has faced. But tracking those other aspects of diversity on corporate / / regulators like the Securities and Exchange Commission do not require disclosure­s on them. “They’re not re-

quired to tell us the gender of each of their directors,” she said. “The way we get the data is by reading biographie­s of the directors and looking for pronouns.” She added that “common sense” would show that boardroom discussion­s would diversity, and that it would lead to decisions “that are in the best interest of the shareholde­rs, the company and society.” Klein suggested a compromise solution for companies that may not want to be legally forced to add more women directors to their board. In the least, they must share informatio­n on their diversity record, she said. “Give us the gender diversity of the board, the top management team, and of your managers overall. And tell us [about] your gender pay gap — the amount of money that the average woman makes in the company versus the average man.” She added that public disclosure­s of such informatio­n could prompt companies to take corrective action, and pointed to legislatio­n in the U.K. that requires reporting on gender pay gaps. “Not surprising­ly, companies are embarrasse­d when they have whopping pay gaps. The act of mandating companies to share data is good for researcher­s, but also moves the needle on [corporate] practices [in addressing diversity issues].” Iceland, for example, has passed legislatio­n that requires companies to subject themselves to external audits to prove that they are complying with laws on gender diversity. In the U.S, institutio­nal investors could play a big role in addressing issues of diversity on corporate boards, said Barrett. She added that institutio­nal investors have the requisite power because they hold about 70% of all the traded stock of publicly held U.S. companies.

Challenges Ahead

The California law could face challenges on two fronts, according to Barrett. One is “the constituti­onality of giving preference to one diverse group over another,” and the other relates to the distinctio­n between where the companies are headquarte­red and where they are incorporat­ed, she said. A large percentage of California companies are incorporat­ed in Delaware, Maryland and Nevada, and only 8% of the companies in the Russell 3000 stock index are both headquarte­red and incorporat­ed in California, she added. The California Chamber of Commerce is among those that has opposed the new law. “We are concerned that the mandate … focuses only on gender [and] potentiall­y elevates it as a priority over other aspects of diversity,” it said in a positon paper.

Give us the gender diversity of the board, the top management team, and of your managers overall. And tell us [about] your gender pay gap

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