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Monday 23 January 2017 11:00 am

The number of female executives at BFGEI member firms increased by a quarter in one year

By: Courtney Goldsmith

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The number of female executives increased by more than a quarter between fiscal year 2014 and 2015, according to figures released today by Bloomberg.

The group's 2017 Financial Services Gender-Equality Index (BFGEI) found an average of 24.2 per cent female representation on the 52 boards it surveyed, which include Barclays, American Express and Royal Bank of Scotland.

Read more: The gender pay gap has halved in a generation (for this group of women)

"We are encouraged by the significant expansion of this year's index, and by the leadership each of our member firms has demonstrated," said Peter T Grauer, chairman of Bloomberg and founding chairman of the US 30 per cent Club.


(Source: Bloomberg)

"Their commitments to building diverse and inclusive work environments are setting new standards around the globe and raising awareness around the challenges all of our organisations face," he added.

Read more: Thousands of women forced into lower-paid jobs after a career break

Of the member firms, 73 per cent require a gender-diverse slate of candidates for management roles, 83 per cent offer or sponsor financial education programmes for women in their communities, 75 per cent provide return-to-work programmes and nine track repayment rates by gender.

​"Companies are increasingly focused on managing operational risks, including the attraction and retention of employees," said Angela Sun, head of strategy and corporate development at Bloomberg.

"The BFGEI brings greater transparency to the practices and policies crucial to managing those risks and attracting investor capital," she added.


(Source: Bloomberg)

The 2017 BFGEI recognises firms headquartered in 17 countries, expanding to Australia, Brazil, India, Japan, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Mexico, Sweden and Turkey.

Read more: In pictures: Women march against Trump in London and around the world

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