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Europeans lag behind US corporations on gender balance...

...and Asia's top ten are even further behind

WOMEN-omics has compared the best ten companies from the Fortune 100 and from the top 20 multinationals in Europe according to the percentage of women appointed to their executive committees.

This accords with our view that in the US the most progress has been made in the private sphere by companies, whereas in Europe and elsewhere governments have made more headway in creating societies in which women excel alongside men. They favour family-friendly policies such as equal access to employment, parental leave for men and women, and equal pay.

In the US, public policy has not caught up with Europe. In the latest Global Gender Gap Report from the World Economic Forum, the United States is ranked 53 out of 130 countries in terms of wage equality between men and women and 27 in terms of the participation of women in the workforce. Norway ranks at 10 for labour force participation and 23 for wage equality.

Overall, Norway, Finland and Sweden come in at the top three positions in the Global Gender Gap report, trailed by the US at 21st position.

European multinationals lag behind US corporations

However, as we can see many of Europe’s companies have not felt the need to take action with the same gusto as their American counterparts to advance more women to senior management positions.

  • The results show that the best European multinationals perform very poorly in terms of gender balance when compared to their Fortune 100 counterparts.
  • The top three Fortune 100 companies have 40% or more of their executive committees made up of women corporate officers, whereas the top three European multinationals have 25% or less.
  • Only two European multinationals (Royal Dutch Shell and BP Amoco) have two women executives on their executive committees. The remaining eight companies have only one woman sitting on their executive committee.
  • Only one company in our Fortune 100 top ten has two women sitting on its executive committee (Lockheed Martin). The remainder have between 3 and 4 women corporate officers on their executive committees.
  • Three of the Fortune 100 companies are run by women CEOs (Kraft Foods, WellPoint and PepsiCo). None of the European top ten are run by a woman CEO.

Click here for our gender balance survey of the Fortune 100 companies.

Top ten
Fortune 100
companies

% women
on Exec
Committee

Top ten
European multinationals

% women
on Exec
Committee

Macy's

50%

Royal Dutch Shell

25%

Johnson & Johnson

44%

BP Amoco

18%

Kraft Foods

40%

AstraZeneca

12%

WellPoint

33%

Unilever

12%

MetLife

33%

France Telecom

11%

Lockheed Martin

33%

Roche Holding

8%

Prudential Financial

33%

Nokia

8%

Hartford Financial Services

33%

Ericsson

8%

PepsiCo

31%

ENI

8%

State Farm
Insurance Co

29%

Novartis

7%


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