Knocking on unbroken glass
The Toronto Star: Blogs
January 17, 2008
From
our It Just Gets Worse and Worse Department: The number of women in top
corporate jobs in Canada is down 16 per cent year-over-year, reports the
executive search firm Rosenzweig & Company. That represents a whopping drop of
SIX jobs -- from a staggering 37 to 31 out of 535.
Rosenzweig & Company analyzed the 100 biggest publicly-traded companies in
Canada, based on revenue. Annual revenue ranges between $1.7 billion and $36
billion at these companies.
All these large corporations must name and publicly disclose the compensation of
their Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Chief Financial Officer (CFO), and at least
the next three highest compensated executive officers. Some companies list more
than five officers.
Of the 535 top officers reported at these 100 corporations, 5.8 per cent are
women and 94.2 per cent are men. Last year, out of the same number of executive
positions disclosed, 37 (or 6.9 per cent) were women, and 93.1 per cent were
men.
"The reasons for the drop are many and varied, but no matter how you slice this
data, women are simply not being promoted to the top jobs in Corporate Canada at
the pace they should be," adds (Jay Rosenzweig, Managing Partner of Rosenzweig &
Company.)
"And the irony of this is that study after study shows that when corporations
tap into the huge talent pool of women for top positions, financial performance
improves and shareholders benefit," he says.
So, let's get this straight. Not only do women bring a tremendous wealth of
knowledge, talent and experience to the table, they beef up the bottom line.
And yet:
The report also noted that there are currently only three women serving as chief
executives of the top 100 Canadian public companies, and only four of the
companies surveyed had more than one woman in their top executive ranks.
Seventy-four companies had only men serving as their highest-compensated
executive officers.
This, by the way, is pretty much the way it shapes up in the U.S.
Are women intentionally shut out? Are the corner offices hostile places for
women? Are there roadblocks to their advancement? Do women walk in, take a look
around at the old boys clubs and go, "Uh, no thanks?" Do they need wives to help
them out?
Or are male CEOs just stupid sexist pigs?
You tell me.