The Independent

Women bosses could help raise 10 times more profit

- MAYA OPPENHEIM WOMEN’S CORRESPOND­ENT

Companies with women bosses could help the firm bring in 10 times more profit, a new study has found.

Researcher­s discovered listed companies where at least one-third of the bosses are women have a profit margin more than 10 times bigger than those with no women in such roles.

But the study carried out by gender diversity company the Pipeline found only 14 of the 350 largest companies in the UK are led by women.

While 15 per cent of firms in the FTSE 350, the 350 largest firms listed on the London Stock Exchange, have no female executives at all.

Researcher­s found there were more chief executives who go by the name of Peter than there were female CEOs.

Firms with no women on their executive committees have a net profit margin of 1.5 per cent, while companies with more than one in three women on their committees reached an average 15.2 per cent net profit margin.

Researcher­s found if stock exchange firms with no women on their executive committees had functioned with the same net profit margin as those with more than a third, a further £47bn could have been generated in pre-tax profit – which is enough cash to keep the NHS going for five months.

Lorna Fitzsimons, co-founder of The Pipeline, the largest gender diversity business in the UK, said: “Women Count 2020 report shows the stark difference in net profit margins of companies that have diverse gender leadership­s compared to those who do not.

“During the most unpreceden­ted economic challenge of our lifetime, the economy can’t afford for businesses to continuall­y miss the opportunit­y to be more productive. Businesses and government­s need to actively address this as an economic imperative if we want to come out of the inevitable recession any time soon. We will then emerge from this crisis together, stronger, and more united than ever in a post Covid-19 world.”

Constructi­on and retail were found to be two of the sectors that have the lowest rates of gender equality in top positions.

Researcher­s argued it was imperative for firms to tackle gender inequality immediatel­y in the context of Britain’s economy shrinking by a record 20.4 per cent in April due to the coronaviru­s lockdown.

It comes after a recent study found the coronaviru­s crisis is driving gender inequality, with women almost twice as likely as men to have lost their job during the pandemic.

Researcher­s at the University of Exeter’s Business School discovered 7 per cent of women had been made redundant during the lockdown in comparison to 4 per cent of men.

The report, which polled 1,500 people and came out earlier in the month, found women were more likely to have seen their working hours reduced during the public health emergency while simultaneo­usly taking on more childcare responsibi­lities, housework and homeschool­ing than men.

 ??  ?? Report found only 14 of the 350 largest companies in UK are currently led by women (Getty)
Report found only 14 of the 350 largest companies in UK are currently led by women (Getty)

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