Texarkana Gazette

McDonald’s ties exec pay to diversity

- By Crayton Harrison and Anne Riley Moffat

McDonald’s Corp. said it is tying 15% of executives’ bonuses to meeting targets including diversity and inclusion and began disclosing data on the racial makeup of its workforce, major steps by one of the largest U.S. companies to better reflect the population.

Among the informatio­n McDonald’s is releasing for the first time is a full breakdown of U.S. employees by race, ethnicity and gender, a victory for transparen­cy advocates and investors increasing­ly pressing companies to do more to address the country’s deeply rooted social inequality.

In addition to publicly releasing its worker demographi­cs — contained on a form known as EEO-1 that corporatio­ns are required to give to the U.S. government — the fast-food giant laid out a plan to increase the number of people of color in its U.S. management ranks and to achieve gender parity worldwide, according

to a filing Thursday.

“We cannot be complacent in our pursuit to better ourselves and our communitie­s. Few brands in the world have our size and reach,”

McDonald’s Chief Executive Officer Chris Kempczinsk­i wrote in a memo to employees Thursday viewed by Bloomberg News. “Our customers,

franchisee­s, employees, suppliers, and shareholde­rs expect us to make a difference.”

As part of its new metrics, McDonald’s is targeting 35% of U.S. senior management to be from underrepre­sented groups by 2025, up from 29% currently. It also aims for 45% women in senior roles worldwide by the same year and 50% by 2030, compared with 37% now.

Like other big American companies, McDonald’s has a complicate­d history when it comes to diversity. It has won praise for championin­g Black business ownership, but some Black franchisee­s recently filed suit, saying they were steered toward crime-ridden neighborho­ods and set up to fail. McDonald’s disputes that characteri­zation and says it has supported the franchisee­s.

The Chicago-based company has also contended for years with accusation­s that it overlooks workplace harassment and abuse, culminatin­g in the very public dismissal of its former CEO in late 2019 to drive home its commitment to gender equality in the #MeToo era.

Women’s share among McDonald’s leadership and profession­al positions were in line with or slightly better than the industry, according to the company’s data.

McDonald’s has a slightly higher proportion of Black and Hispanic executives and senior managers than the food services and drinking places sector but lags the industry for those employee groups among first and mid-level managers, according to the company’s data. Black and Hispanic workers make up a larger share of profession­al employees compared with peers. The data is from 2018, the most recent year available because of reporting delays caused by the covid-19 pandemic.

The fast-food retailer had 205,000 workers worldwide at the end of 2019, including corporate employees and workers in the restaurant­s it owns directly. The plans it announced Thursday have been in the works since the middle of last year, when the company pledged to step up efforts to fight systemic racism by addressing any hiring biases, increasing the diversity of its leadership and doing more to attract diverse franchisee­s. In November, it hired a new global chief diversity equity and inclusion officer, Reginald Miller, from footwear company VF Corp.

Pressure has been mounting for the chain to release its workforce data. New York City Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer and investors including the New York City Employees’ Retirement System in December warned McDonald’s and about two dozen other major corporatio­ns that shareholde­rs would be asked to vote on nonbinding proposals requiring the release of the EEO-1 forms at their next annual meetings if they didn’t release them on their own.

State Street Global Advisors — one of McDonald’s largest shareholde­rs — upped the ante last month, announcing plans to start voting against the compensati­on committee chair in 2022 at any companies in the S&P 500 that don’t disclose their EEO-1 survey responses.

A Bloomberg survey of 100 top U.S. companies published in October found that 25 were disclosing their EEO-1 data. More have come forth since, including Starbucks Corp., which also said it would tie executive pay in part to diversity targets. Starbucks is aiming for 30% of all corporate roles to be held by people of color by 2025, and at least 40% of retail and manufactur­ing jobs.

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Luke Sharrett ?? A worker passes a bag of food to a customer at a McDonald’s drive-through window in 2017 in White House, Tenn.
Bloomberg photo by Luke Sharrett A worker passes a bag of food to a customer at a McDonald’s drive-through window in 2017 in White House, Tenn.

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