BUSINESS

The 100 most powerful women

By Elizabeth MacDonald and Chana R Schoenberger, Forbes
July 29, 2005
The up-and-comers, the ones to watch, the returnees. Here are the women who make things happen.

Our second ranking of the world's most powerful women illustrates how fleeting power is. Megawati Sukarnoputri, the former president of Indonesia who lost her reelection bid, dropped off the rankings.

Gone, too, is Carleton (Carly) Fiorina, booted from Hewlett-Packard. The scandal-plagued president of the Philippines, Gloria Arroyo (#4), could soon be off as well.

Among the newcomers: Yulia Tymoshenko (#3), prime minister of Ukraine.

The Ten Most Powerful Women
Rank

Name

Title/Country

1

Condoleezza Rice

Secretary of State/US

2

Yi Wu

Vice Premier/China

3

Yulia Tymoshenko

Prime Minister/Ukraine

4

Gloria Arroyo

President/Philippines

5

Margaret Whitman

Chief Executive, Ebay/US

6

Anne Mulcahy

Chief Executive, Xerox /US

7

Sallie Krawcheck

Chief Financial Officer, Citigroup/US

8

Brenda Barnes

Chief Executive, Sara Lee/US

9

Oprah Winfrey

Chairman, Harpe/US

10

Melinda Gates

Cofounder, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation/US

Click here to get the entire list

Our power rankings are based on a composite of visibility (measured by press citations) and economic impact.

100 Most Powerful Women

Businesswomen

Humanitarians

Media Mavens

The latter, in turn, reflects three things: résumé (a prime minister is more powerful than a senator); the size of the economic sphere over which a leader holds sway; and a multiplier that aims to make different economic yardsticks comparable.

Politicians

Near Misses

Middle Eastern Women To Watch

For example, a politician is assigned a GDP number but gets a low multiplier, while a foundation executive is assigned the foundation's assets but gets a high multiplier.

Assistance: Catalyst, a research nonprofit; Laura Liswood, secretary general of the Council of Women World Leaders; and Elizabeth Ryan of Worldwit, a women's business group.

Reported by Suzanne Hoppough, Luisa Kroll, Anne Mintz, Victoria Murphy and Tatiana Serafin. Additional reporting by Stephane Fitch, Alina Hartounian, Leah Hoffmann, Kiyoe Minami, Lacey Rose, Matthew Swibel, Wendy Widman and Cristina von Zeppelin.

Elizabeth MacDonald and Chana R Schoenberger, Forbes

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