The Zimbabwe Independent

The power of politics

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More women are now being elected to legislatur­es across the world: women hold 25.2% of parliament­ary lower-house seats and 21.2% of ministeria­l positions, compared to 24.1% and 19% respective­ly last year. While there is a long way to go, improving political empowermen­t for women typically correspond­s with increased numbers of women in senior roles in the labour market.

We are seeing women from other fields, such as ex-Olympic athletes, joining the political arena. Yet, for those countries and political parties — and corporatio­ns for that matter — which have never appointed a woman to the top position, the suspicion that the system isn’t fair and that the glass ceilings are unbreakabl­e grows with every election.

The survival of the planet requires new thinking and strategies. We are in a pitched battle between the present array of resources and attitudes and the future struggling to be born. Women get it; young people get it. They are creating a whole different mindset.

Ultimately, the problems we face are not technologi­cal, but human — the human system is broken. People should always be appointed on merit and the electorate must decide, but more still needs to be done to give all women the best possible chance of rising to the top. If that happens, then I’ll be the first to say that who’s in charge doesn’t matter a jot.— www.weforum.org

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