new banks, new chances?

40
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New Banks New Chances

Photo Roberto Stuckert FilhoWikimedia Commons

By Gry Tina Tinde

Also posted on Medium March 2015

Two new development banks being set up in China this year have great potential to reap the business benefits of gender equality and diversity Record numbers of female company managers in BRICS and other Asian African and Latin American countries could herald a revolution in talent recruitment However we may not have reached the point where executives are punished for not meeting gender parity targets except for in their bottom line that is

2

3

In terms of purchasing power parity (PPP) China became the worldrsquos largest economy on 10 October 2014 wrote Kaushik Basu Chief Economist at the World Bank Yet it has only a four percent voting share in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) despite accounting for more than 16 percent of global GDP and over 19 percent of world population Stronger economies are able to flex muscles for instance by creating new financial institutions

4

The New Development Bank (NDB) and The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) challenge Western dominance of the World Bank the IMF and the regional development banks It is encouraging that the new banks shatter obsolete global power structures and that they can make decisions geographically closer to the people concerned South Africa will host a regional NDB center and ldquowelcomes the new BRICS bankrdquo

5

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

By Gry Tina Tinde

Also posted on Medium March 2015

Two new development banks being set up in China this year have great potential to reap the business benefits of gender equality and diversity Record numbers of female company managers in BRICS and other Asian African and Latin American countries could herald a revolution in talent recruitment However we may not have reached the point where executives are punished for not meeting gender parity targets except for in their bottom line that is

2

3

In terms of purchasing power parity (PPP) China became the worldrsquos largest economy on 10 October 2014 wrote Kaushik Basu Chief Economist at the World Bank Yet it has only a four percent voting share in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) despite accounting for more than 16 percent of global GDP and over 19 percent of world population Stronger economies are able to flex muscles for instance by creating new financial institutions

4

The New Development Bank (NDB) and The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) challenge Western dominance of the World Bank the IMF and the regional development banks It is encouraging that the new banks shatter obsolete global power structures and that they can make decisions geographically closer to the people concerned South Africa will host a regional NDB center and ldquowelcomes the new BRICS bankrdquo

5

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

3

In terms of purchasing power parity (PPP) China became the worldrsquos largest economy on 10 October 2014 wrote Kaushik Basu Chief Economist at the World Bank Yet it has only a four percent voting share in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) despite accounting for more than 16 percent of global GDP and over 19 percent of world population Stronger economies are able to flex muscles for instance by creating new financial institutions

4

The New Development Bank (NDB) and The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) challenge Western dominance of the World Bank the IMF and the regional development banks It is encouraging that the new banks shatter obsolete global power structures and that they can make decisions geographically closer to the people concerned South Africa will host a regional NDB center and ldquowelcomes the new BRICS bankrdquo

5

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

In terms of purchasing power parity (PPP) China became the worldrsquos largest economy on 10 October 2014 wrote Kaushik Basu Chief Economist at the World Bank Yet it has only a four percent voting share in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) despite accounting for more than 16 percent of global GDP and over 19 percent of world population Stronger economies are able to flex muscles for instance by creating new financial institutions

4

The New Development Bank (NDB) and The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) challenge Western dominance of the World Bank the IMF and the regional development banks It is encouraging that the new banks shatter obsolete global power structures and that they can make decisions geographically closer to the people concerned South Africa will host a regional NDB center and ldquowelcomes the new BRICS bankrdquo

5

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

The New Development Bank (NDB) and The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) challenge Western dominance of the World Bank the IMF and the regional development banks It is encouraging that the new banks shatter obsolete global power structures and that they can make decisions geographically closer to the people concerned South Africa will host a regional NDB center and ldquowelcomes the new BRICS bankrdquo

5

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Keeping up with changes

Analysts told the Weekly Wonk that the new banks may not rival the IMF just yet but Western leaders are feeling their power base crumble We are ldquoin a period of transition with important changes in the political and economic relations between east and west and north and southrdquo said Per Oslashyvind Bastoslashe of the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(Norad) in a November 2014 blog post He added a quote by Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz ldquoWersquore in a different world mdash but the old institutions havenrsquot kept uprdquo Against this backdrop let us look at why it is as important to reject old power structures between the sexes as it is to adapt to a new global economy

6

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

ldquoThe highest proportions of women with senior roles are in the BRICS nations -Brazil Russia India China and South Africardquo

Maria Saab JD in TIME

Africa showing the ropes

In 2010 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala Nigeriarsquos Finance Minister then Managing Director at the World Bank said at Harvard University ldquoThe big idea is that sub-Saharan Africa is on the verge of joining the ranks of the BRICsrdquo That is 50 countries whose growth both economically and in terms of womenrsquos leadership may outdo Western Europe and North America The will to promote African women into executive leadership is nothing new

7

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

In 2002 the African Union adopted gender parity for itself which led to over 50 percent AU female commissioners in 2003 NkosazamaDlamini-Zuma who heads the gender-balanced AU Commission wrote today on International Womenrsquos Day that the AU has declared 2015 as the ldquoYear of Womenrsquos Empowerment and Development towards Africarsquos Agenda 2063rdquo Contrary to the African Union the 28-member European Union Commission has no gender parity rule never had a female president and has 19 male and nine female members

8

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

African trailblazers

South Africa where Dr Dlamini-Zuma comes from has a higher proportion of women on company boards than the US according to Harvard Business Review Adding to leaders including Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi the African Development Bankrsquos Special Envoy on GenderPhumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka Executive Director of UN Women Winnie Byanyima Executive Director of Oxfam International Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda General Secretary of World YWCA and AU Goodwill Ambassador for Ending Child Marriage and Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor for the World Bank Group These leaders are amplifying their voice by using social media including Twitter to hold wayward peersrsquo feet to the fire

9

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Rwanda as role model

Africarsquos economy has had more than five percent annual growth in the last decade reported The Economist in January 2015 It has probably not escaped African leaders that high gender equality score prosperity and peace often coincide Rwanda has the worldrsquos highest proportion of women in parliament (638 percent) and is friendlier to foreign investment than Italy according to the same Economist article The Nordic countries occupy the five top places in the 2014 World Economic Forumrsquos Gender Gap Report Rwanda is in seventh place as the highest-ranking African country Reading from the bottom the five countries with the worst gender gaps are Qatar Yemen Oman Kuwait and Iran

10

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

The EU website about gender justice advocates for gender balance in decision-making in companies and member countries without

mentioning any plans to overcome the EU Commissionrsquos preference for male commissioners

Look to China

As the global economy shifts evidently so does the composition of business management According to Grant Thornton International Business Report the share of women among company senior managers in China jumped from 25 in 2012 to 51 percent in 2013 This is the highest number the world has seen Prof Hiromi Ishizuka at SannoUniversity notes in her study of gender in management in Japan South Korea and China that China has a high share of female full-time employees too

11

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 report found Chinese women to make up 38 percent of senior managers Suggested reasons for Chinarsquos high score include the focus of socialism on equality as well as the one-child policy which lowered the childcare burden and rapid urbanization Might there be a connection between Chinarsquos economic win and gender parity If so it is the biggest but not first country to gain from womenrsquos leadership and formal employment

12

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Russia takes the lead

Russian women make up 43 percent of senior managers up from around 15 percent in the beginning of the 2000s The BRICS average was 32 percent in 2014 according to Grant Thornton The United States has 22 percent of senior positions filled by women marginally lower than the European Unionrsquos 23 percent Globally women hold 24 percent of such positions According to Fortune in January 2015 there are 25 female CEOs at Fortune 500 Companies in the US which is five percent

13

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

India is not like other BRICS

Why are women in emerging markets becoming business leaders faster than those in high-income countries Increased investment in womenrsquos education is a major catalyst wrote Maria Saab JD in a TIME opinion piece last year In 1980 the female tertiary education participation ratio in China and India was less than 40 (for every 100 males) but has now climbed to 111 in China and 78 in India according to Grant Thorntonrsquos 2014 ldquoWomen in Business Reportrdquo The same report points to the low ranking of patriarchal societies when it comes to women in senior management India and the United Arab Emirates have 14 percent and Japan nine percent Brazil has 22 percent female senior managers

14

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Economies in Eastern Europe (37 percent) and Southeast Asia (35 percent) lead the way on women in leadership according to the 2014

Grant Thornton International Business Report

What about the ambitions

Women with higher education in the BRICS countries are more ambitious than comparable women in high-income countries reported Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid in their book ldquoWinning the War for Talent in Emerging Markets Why Women are the Solutionrdquo Of female interviewees in India 80 percent said they were aiming for a top job The figures for Brazil and China were over 70 percent while only 36 percent of highly qualified American women said they wanted to advance to the top

15

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

In Russia 86 percent of women aged 18ndash23 were in tertiary education as opposed to only 64 percent of the men May we assume that women in BRICS countries sharpen their CVs when the new development banks soon look to fill new management jobs Might some of 25 most powerful women in the Asia-Pacific region or notable women in their networks or from other parts of the world receive a call Development Banks need many economists and often recruit from the private sector including banks Bios of managers at the World Bank illustrate this

16

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Gender paradox

Norway my own small country (pop five million) tops a 2014 Catalyst list of the highest share of female company board members in the world with 355 percent Women make up 40 percent of public limited company boards as required by law since 2003 Higher numbers of women have made board work more professional and global said Olaug Svarva Managing Director of Folketrygdfondet the largest domestic-focused investment fund However are Nordic women as numerous among CEOs as they are in parliaments and the workforce

17

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

The answer is no Maria Saab JD outlines this paradox in a June 2014 Time article None of Norwayrsquos 35 companies with market capitalization over 10 billion USD have a female CEO Bisnode wrote that women head only 31 percent of Norwegian publicly listed companies while 66 is the percentage in Sweden

Unpopular career women

Women are almost never chairpersons of Norwegian boards wrote Ragnhildur E Arnoacutersdoacutettir from Iceland in her masterrsquos thesis A Norwegian study published in March 2015 found that men do not like career women Researchers tested the popularity of imaginary professionals using identical qualifications except for a typical female and male name

18

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

The findings mirrored those of the often quoted ldquoHowardHeidirdquo study at Harvard Business School in 2003 and two more in 1999 and 2004 by scholars at other US universities Back in Scandinavia Curt Rice is Professor at the University of Tromsoslash and head of Norwayrsquos Committee for Gender Balance and Diversity in Research Dr Rice was fuming in his blog response to a claim by Tom Colbjoslashrnsen Director of the BI Norwegian Business School that ldquowomen havenrsquot been discriminated against they just havenrsquot been qualified Thatrsquos why itrsquos taken so long to reach a critical mass of women in business leadershiprdquo

19

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Perhaps the explanation for womenrsquos slow career ascent lies in Laura Liswoodrsquos observation below She was plenary speaker and had an 800-person crowd roaring with laughter (me included) at the Womenrsquos Forum for the Society and Economy in Deauville France in 2006

ldquoThere is no glass ceiling just a thick layer of menrdquo

Laura Liswood

Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders

20

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Discrimination at a cost

Twenty years ago the UN ranked Canada first for its level of progress toward gender equality but that progress has nearly grounded to a halt laments The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) 2014 ldquoAt the current rate of progress Canada will not close the gender gap until the year 2240rdquo The CCPA estimates the gender gap to cost the Canadian economy in excess of $145 billion annually a figure equivalent to ten percent of the national GDP The Globe and Mail wrote that the share of Canadian women in senior management grew by just 23 percent between 1993 and 2013

21

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

New banks grabbing the opportunity

What strategy will BRICS and other member states use when they recruit talent for the new development banks in Beijing and Shanghai Will they abandon the traditional male focus of executive searches for development banks Executive search companies exclude women wrote Melissa J Anderson in a March 2014 piece in The Glass Hammer Finding the next boss may not necessarily need a companyrsquos help according to Michael Ensser of Egon Zehnder At WINConference in Berlin October 2014 (slide 28) he enlightened the audience of 750 mostly women

22

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

ldquoCareers are still made during a pee in the gentsrsquo toiletrdquo

(Quoting what he said a manager had told him)

Michael Ensser Managing Partner Egon Zehnder

The above quote comes from a Western perspective It may have no bearing on the recruitment realities of the new BRICS and Asian development banks

23

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Winners in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

One Latin American and two Caribbean countries have sailed past all others when it comes to the share of female managers according to a study the International Labour Organization (ILO) released in January 2015 Jamaica Colombia and Saint Lucia top a ranking of 80 countries and are the only ones where your boss is more likely to be a woman writes The Washington Post

Reasons for the various or conflicting rankings of countries in my article may be that some studies target top leadership levels while others include all senior managers

24

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

ldquoBoth men and women in BRICS countries meet rigid gender roles more often than is the case in Europe and North Americardquo

Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Ripa Rashid

Why choose diversity

Will the owners of the new development banks ensure that management and staff reflect societyrsquos composition in terms of gender indigenous peoples persons living with disabilities and other groups ldquoThe evidence is growing mdash There really is a business case for diversityrdquo wrote the Financial Times in May 2014

25

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Laura Liswood titled her February 2015 article in Harvard Business Review ldquoWomen Directors Change how Boards Workrdquo Ms Liswood who is Secretary General of the Council of Women World Leaders shared findings by Aaron A Dhir an associate professor at York Universityrsquos Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Dhir has done extensive research for his forthcoming 2015 book Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity Corporate Law Governance and Diversity

The gains

Professor Dhir identified seven consequences of gender-based heterogeneity for boardroom work board governance and group dynamics 1 Enhanced dialogue 2 Better decision making including the value of dissent

26

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

3 More effective risk mitigation and crisis management and a better balance between risk-welcoming and risk aversion behavior 4 Higher quality monitoring of and guidance to management 5 Positive changes to the boardroom environment and culture 6 More orderly and systematic board work and 7 Positive changes in the behavior of men

Why gender balance in leadership

More women on boards make businesses more profitable A number of studies have proven this If the new development banks are smart and ensure gender balance they will get more money to spend Over the past 15 years the think tank Catalyst has found that the US Fortune 500 companies with the most women board directors (WBD) are the most profitable

27

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Compared with companies with the lowest proportion of WBD firms with five consecutive years with the highest proportion of WBD had 84 percent more profit from sales 60 percent more from capital investment and 46 percent more in dividends

Hard facts

Credit Suisse showed in a global study of 2360 companies that was carried out between 2005ndash2012 that those with more women board directors were more profitable Enterprises with at least one woman on the board had 26 percent more profits than those with male-only boards Credit Suisse found

28

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Especially during the financial crisis from 2008 companies with women on the board performed best The Turkish bank Garanti and IFC found in a 2014 study that companies headed by women were 15 to 25 percent more profitable than those who were led by men

Good for women good for men

In the report ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment Good for Business Good for Developmentrdquo from 2013 IFC describes how companies have worked to increase the proportion of women and the social and financial benefits Examples from industry and business in Chile Thailand Kenya Ukraine Vietnam and Brazil document how productivity satisfaction and profitability has gone up thanks to systematic efforts to hire promote and retain women

29

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

The findings show that what is good for women in the workplace also benefit men Examples include transparency and systems ensuring that skills are the deciding factor for employment and promotions training anti-harassment policy childcare parental leave and flexible work hours

Thanks to such measures fewer than before quit their jobs FinlaysHorticulture in Kenya used to recruit executives externally (90 percent of them were men in 2004) which meant costly advertising recruitment process and training

Finlays calculated that internal promotion of 69 women from 2010 to 2012 had saved the company 200000 USD (Page 78)

30

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Mriyia a Ukrainian agricultural company found that it cost 25 times the annual salary of a skilled employee to replace him or her

ldquoInvesting in Womenrsquos Employment mdash Good for Business Good for Development IFC

How to break old recruitment habits

With the current speed boards and management groups at for example the World Bank and regional development banks will not see gender balance anytime soon One wonders if they even want to and if anyone has been held accountable for lackluster approaches If top executives have been fired for not keeping word on gender parity promises it has escaped the press and Google searches

31

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

A report by the network ORIGIN from 2010 describes measures and goals for diversity and equality in 14 international entities The World Bank announced in the report that gender balance in leadership should be reached by the end of 2012 but this has not happened On 8 March 2015 14 of the 44 managers featured on the World Bank website are women which is 31 per cent When I counted in November 2014 there were 16 women on the list which had 46 entries

No African woman among the World Bankrsquos own leaders

In 2012 The Guardian urged the World Bank to ldquoembrace racial equality and accountabilityrdquo This could be why None of the 14 women in the World Bankrsquos management team of 44 people is from an African or low-income country

32

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Of the 14 women in management 12 are from Western high-income countries A woman from Indonesia (middle-income country) and one from India (also middle income) are the only non-western among the 14 The 32 male managers are also mostly western however the team has male nationals from China Egypt Haiti India Japan Korea Mexico Peru Senegal and South Africa

Mostly men managing the coffers

Of the 25 Executive Directors on the World Bankrsquos board 84 percent (21 persons) are men The four female Executive Directors include Ana Dias Lourenccedilo from Angola while the three others are from Finland Germany and the UK (The US position has been vacant for a while)

33

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Governments decide whom to appoint and can therefore make an effort to achieve gender balance if they wish Most countries have laws or guidelines for equality and obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and other international instruments

Finance ministers for gender equality

The World Bankrsquos Board of Governors is its top decision-making body Mainly finance ministers of the 188 member countries hold the seats Globally some 23 women are ministers of financeeconomy according to a recently updated overview

34

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

In 2013 Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala set up a Gender Equality Community of Practice for Finance Ministers that meets every six months A boost of its important work could help to fill the huge financial gaps blocking girlsrsquo and womenrsquos advancement globally

Do the NDB and AIIB have strategies ready

It is not easy to find analyses of the new banksrsquo possible attention to gender and diversity issues mdash which are integral to social and environmental safeguards mdash in the banksrsquo internal or external operations However my review is limited to texts in English Gender and diversity analysts in finance circles of NDB and AIIB member states may have hammered out forward-looking strategies in Chinese Russian Hindi and Portuguese for all I know

35

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Safeguards or not for NDB

Existing multilateral development banks ask borrowers to use safeguards to mitigate harm to communities and the environment Will the new BRICS bank NDB and the Asian AIIB do the same Will they mainstream human rights asked Heinrich Boumlll Stiftung in October 2014

Paragraph 26 of the July 2014 Fortaleza Declaration about the new BRICS bank highlights ldquothe importance of bringing gender perspectives to conflict prevention and resolution peacebuilding peacekeeping rehabilitation and reconstruction effortsrdquo Suzanna Dennis in Population Action wrote in July 2014 that the same Declaration recognizes the importance of sexual and reproductive health (Paragraph 57)

36

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Yet in August 2014 Curtis Chin referred to development experts ldquofearing that a new BRICS bank will not take as seriously social safeguards implemented with mixed degree at the World Bank Asian Development Bank African Development Bank and elsewhererdquo He warned about personnel politics but kept gender and diversity out of the equation

AIIB safeguards

Likewise analysts are critical of AIIBrsquos safeguards and social standards taking note of Chinarsquos infrastructure lending history and practice in the African continent in particular reported Don Rodney Ong Junio in December 2014 Again media coverage in the English language is meager

37

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

A tweet from LendySpires took up the inclusion of women in AIIB in June 2014 According to Reuters the AIIBrsquos 20 Asian members plus New Zealand of the Pacific Region aim to finalize the articles of agreement toward the end of 2015

Member states of both NDB and AIIB are using 2015 to negotiate the terms and modus operandi Now is the time to make sure the do not

refit the blinders that the Bretton Woods institutions have worn regarding gender and diversity

38

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

No magic bullets buthellip

One may ask whether safeguards would be as necessary and comprehensive if more managers and employees of development banks represented groups who have the greatest need for development (and consequently much knowledge about what needs to be done) With international recruitment it is quite possible to find qualified candidates of both sexes or non-specific gender who have their own experience or close contact with excluded groups in low-and middle-income countries

This applies not least to people living with disabilities They may have relevant education for top positions at development banks but nevertheless face obstacles and prejudices as job seekers

39

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40

Similarly there appears to be few representatives of indigenous peoples running development bank programs addressing or affecting indigenous peoples The fight against HIV AIDS requires close cooperation with infected and vulnerable people and their communities to find the best methods to prevent spread Projects succeed more often if people concerned are involved in formulating and leading them wrote Anju Sharma in January 2014

It is people who write and carry out policy Talent searches help to shape organizations The NDB and AIIB have a golden opportunity to make sure managers and staff reflect the demographic mix of their member states Everybody wins right

40