JPMorgan's Dimon sees another decade before wave of female CEOs
[NEW YORK] Jamie Dimon doesn't see the gender imbalance at the top of corporate America getting fixed soon.
It will probably take 10 or 15 years before a wave of female chief executive officers meaningfully improves the ratio, JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s CEO said at a New York Times event focused on female leadership.
There are 25 female CEOs running S&P 500 companies, according to Catalyst, a nonprofit that advocates for women in the workplace. The number will go down to 24 when Indra Nooyi leaves her position at PepsiCo Inc, taking the ratio below 5 per cent. Mr Dimon said it will likely take at least another decade for women to make up 10 per cent to 15 per cent of CEOs.
Mr Dimon highlighted the progress his bank has made on promoting women, noting that "a lot" of the candidates to be his successor are female. Still, he acknowledged that it's a "big issue" that just 30 per cent of the firm's vice presidents are women, and said he's looking to add another woman to the bank's board, where 10 of the 12 members are men.
BLOOMBERG
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Banking & Finance
UOB CEO ‘cautiously optimistic’ on 2024; Q1 profit down 1.6% to S$1.49 billion
Australia lending rules make banks go ‘too hard’ on due diligence: Westpac
Australia banks shower investors with A$5 billion in buybacks
Bank of Japan’s Ueda signals chance of policy action if yen moves affect inflation
Fed’s Kashkari says rates likely on hold for ‘extended period’
FTX has billions more than needed to pay bankruptcy victims