More women hold Fortune 500 Co. spots ( 2003-12-05 11:14) (Agencies)
Women held 13.6 per cent of corporate director seats in 2003, up from 12.4
per cent in 2001 and 9.5 per cent in 1995, the study said.
The number of women board directors have increased at an annual average rate
of 4.1 per cent for the years 1995 to 2003. The study predicts that if the
increase holds steady at that rate, women will comprise a quarter of all Fortune
500 company board rooms in 20 years.
The number is likely to rise as the independence of boards has become
increasingly important at a time when corporate governance issues are being
fine-tuned following a wave of scandals, the nonprofit women's advocacy group
said.
The search for more qualified outside candidates with fewer ties to chief
executives and other directors will give more women a chance to serve on boards,
the study predicted.
An increased demand for experts in fields like finance and human resources
where women hold senior positions and vacancies arising because men are serving
on fewer boards simultaneously, also should drive up the number of women board
directors in the next few years, the study said.
Companies are also more sensitive to the fact that they are viewed as
'employers of choice' if women play powerful roles in their organizations.
Currently, 54 Fortune 500 companies have 25 per cent or more women directors,
up from 30 companies in 2001 and 11 in 1995. Even so, 54 companies have no women
board directors and 208 have just one woman director. In 2001, 66 companies had
no women in that position, down from 96 in 1995.
Women make up 46.5 per cent of the U.S. work force and held a little more
than 50 per cent of managerial and professional specialty positions last
year.