
Women in corporate leadership, the lived reality Premium
The Hindu
Women’s participation in the workforce must be promoted for its many benefits
Once again, the world will celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8, 2025 and companies will attempt to showcase steps taken toward the inclusion and the increase of women in the workforce. Yet, the lived reality of women in or trying to enter the corporate workforce is starkly different.
The recent instance of rolling back diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programmes in the United States federal government, which also encourages the private sector to end DEI preference hirings, highlights the challenges and the barriers to increasing women’s participation in the workforce. Women, who comprise 48% of corporate America’s workforce, are reeling from the aftershock of this order and are now facing the threat of identity erasure.
It may be easy to brush aside this order as an issue that plagues only the United States. However, the effects of a dip in DEI hirings and women’s exclusion can have severe repercussions in all parts of today’s globally connected world. Regardless of where one is situated globally, conversations relating to the participation of women in the corporate workforce are significant.
While DEI may simply be a corporate mechanism to make small inroads into women’s participation in the workforce, especially at an entry level, at present, even such an entry mechanism has not really increased women’s participation in leadership roles. For instance, in India, women have been historically marginalised from the workforce and comprise about 35.9% of the worker population ratio; the number is starker at the senior and middle management levels where women account for only 12.7% leadership roles as of 2024.
It is easy to brush aside DEI as being a fabricated gesture of tokenism, where women placed in companies are viewed as sufferance or an obligation rather than finding a way at the table on their own merit. Of course, while DEI may help women make an in-road into leadership roles in companies and have a semblance of a level playing field, their performance and ability to consolidate their position will depend on their own performance and further normalise the presence of women at all levels of the workforce.
Over the past decade, Indian legal mandates can be credited to help increase the presence of women in the corporate workforce especially at the senior level. In 2014, the Companies Act, 2013 mandated that at-least one-woman director should be placed on the board of certain class of public limited companies, and in 2015, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) mandated that at least one independent woman director be appointed to the board of India’s top 1000 listed companies. Thus, it is largely due to a legal mandate that companies are attempting to uphold best practices of gender diversity The inclusion of women directors on the board of NSE 500 listed companies has increased more than threefold, from 5 % in 2011 to 18% in 2023.
Research across the world finds that organisations also greatly benefit from women in leadership roles. At a fundamental level, the presence of women increases the depth of the talent pool available in the workforce. Women provide informational diversity gained from different educational and career trajectories and distinct social and professional network associations and offer a participative, democratic leadership style that stimulates robust discussion, drives a richer challenge and delivers greater value. Additionally, women tend to focus on relationship building, foster greater stakeholder commitment and assist in formulating strategies that address stakeholder concerns while also overseeing better monitoring, broader human capital management, and communication channels which increase corporate accountability and reduce corporate risks.