Tata Group Chairman Cyrus Mistry has established his progressive credentials by unequivocally stating that he was looking forward to seeing more women in key leadership positions at Tata Global Beverages (TGB).
He is on strong ground here because this company, like many fast-moving consumer goods companies worldwide, has an impressively large complement of women - 41 per cent, according to its annual report (notably too, TGB’s joint venture with Starbucks is headed by a woman).
It is not clear whether this statistic is the result of a deliberate affirmative action on TGB’s part or a serendipitous development because there are more women entering the workforce who are qualified for jobs in the company, or both.
It’s a slender distinction but an important one because the nature of a company’s approach to gender diversity will determine the outcome.
Globally, white-collar gender diversity in the workplace has become as politically correct a cause to espouse as, say, corporate social responsibility (CSR).
This is not a bad thing if only because it puts the issue squarely out there in the boardrooms and C-Suites so that women get a better chance at the jobs sweepstakes than they did before.
But political correctness should not be confused with sincerity of action. Indeed, the fact that TGB chose to highlight the issue on the cover of its annual report unintentionally suggests just how firmly the glass ceiling is still in place in corporate India.
Other indicators: the assiduous publicity for women who head our financial sector or frequent dewy-eyed profiles of female CEOs.
A little over a year ago, Britannia’s Managing Director Vinita Bali, with over a decade of experience of heading an Indian company, wryly observed that India Inc is “still very much an old boys’ network”.
In reality, therefore, not unlike commitments to CSR, the gender diversity exercise is so pro forma as to make a mockery of the concept.
A big part of the problem, globally and in India, is the nature of the discussion around gender workplace diversity. For one, there’s this odd notion that corporations derive some sort of measurable benefit from hiring more women or having them on their boards or appointing them as CEOs.
Highly generalised studies appear from time to time – some of them in fairly serious journals – suggesting, for instance, that companies with women CEOs are better performers or are more ethical or are better places to work than those headed by men.
Given that the comparative sample sizes are decidedly unequal – less than five per cent of the world’s 500 largest companies are headed by women –
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