Daily Mail

Don ’ t mention your ski trips, firm tells staff

It’s bad for inclusivit­y, claims woke training

- Daily Mail Reporter

AN accountanc­y giant has been accused of ‘mad wokery’ for telling staff not to talk about private schools and skiing trips in a bid to boost inclusivit­y.

KPMG has made unconsciou­s bias training mandatory for its 15,300 UK staff with the threat that their bonuses are at risk if they do not take part.

the sessions starting next month focus on how discussing skiing holidays, gap years and private schooling can isolate others. they also highlight biases faced by those from certain background­s as well as race, gender identity, disability and sexual orientatio­n.

Conservati­ve MP andrew Bridgen condemned the move, saying: ‘It is mad wokery. surely they should be advising their clients “if you go woke you go broke”, not doing it themselves.

‘surely “inclusivit­y”, if it means anything, means employing people from all background­s and all life experience­s. It’s interestin­g that the “bean counters to the ultra rich” would take these measures.

‘they will no doubt still be taking their exotic holidays, but just not talking about them. It seems hypocritic­al and counterpro­ductive.’

It is the first time KPMG has made the training compulsory and the move comes a year after UK chairman Bill Michael quit after being filmed dismissing the concept of unconsciou­s bias. He said: ‘I think unconsciou­s bias is complete crap, complete and utter crap for years, it really is. there is no such thing as unconsciou­s bias, I don’t buy it.

‘Because after every single unconsciou­s bias training that has ever been done, nothing’s ever improved.’ whitehall scrapped such sessions for civil servants in 2020 after an official study found no evidence they worked. the coaching assumes bosses are biased against minorities without realising it, teaching them strategies to overcome this.

But the research said: ‘there is no evidence this training changes behaviour in the long term or improves workplace equality in terms of representa­tion of women, ethnic minorities or other minority groups.’

KPMG’s UK chief people officer Kevin Hogarth said the training will ensure inclusion and diversity ‘gets the attention it deserves’.

‘Bean counters to ultra rich’

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