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niyad

(113,952 posts)
Wed Nov 29, 2023, 04:35 PM Nov 2023

One in seven HR heads believe men are better suited to top jobs

(and the PATRIARCHAL WAR ON WOMEN continues apace)


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Poll indicates younger HR managers are more likely to be prejudiced against women’s capacity to tackle the biggest roles than their older counterparts. Photograph: Aleksandr Davydov/Alamy

One in seven HR heads believe men are better suited to top jobs

‘Shocking’ poll in England and Wales shows nearly one in five reluctant to hire women they think may go on to have children
Robert Booth Social affairs correspondent
Tue 28 Nov 2023 19.01 EST
Last modified on Wed 29 Nov 2023 11.13 EST

A significant minority of human resources executives believe men are better suited to senior management than women, according to the results of a “shocking” poll. Nearly one in seven HR decision-makers rate men as better for top jobs and nearly one in five admitted they were reluctant to hire women they thought might go on to start families, the survey of personnel managers in England and Wales for the charity Young Women’s Trust (YWT) found. It said the figures were a “travesty” and showed England and Wales were “living in the dark ages”. British Telecom, ITV and GlaxoSmithKline all operate under female chief executives in the UK, a country that has had more female leaders than Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the US, and Japan combined.

The findings also indicated that younger HR managers were more likely than their older counterparts to be prejudiced against women’s capacity to tackle the biggest roles. “It is shocking that HR managers still believe that men are better suited to senior management than women,” said Alesha De-Freitas, the head of policy at the Fawcett Society, who said the figures showed businesses were systematically and illegally discriminating against women. “This then funnels through to all of women’s experiences at work, from pay discrimination to unfair treatment around contracts. No wonder there is no prospect of the gender pay gap closing for at least another 28 years.”

. . . .

The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, which represents HR managers, admitted the results of the survey were “concerning” and said they showed “we have much further to go”. “There needs to be a much stronger focus now on increasing the number of women in executive committee roles and their direct reports to build a strong pipeline of female talent for the future,” said Claire McCartney, the senior inclusion and resourcing adviser for the CIPD, which also called for continuing education of decision-makers “on the importance of gender equality at every level and take active steps to address gender stereotypes and biases head-on”.

Young Women’s Trust also polled 4,000 young women and found almost one in four have been paid less than young men for the same work. Half are worried about not having enough opportunities to progress and 28% of HR decision-makers agreed that it was harder for women to progress in their organisation than men. The Department for Business and Trade, which is led by Kemi Badenoch, who is also the minister for women and equalities, declined to comment.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/nov/29/hr-heads-poll-men-women-top-jobs-england-wales

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One in seven HR heads believe men are better suited to top jobs (Original Post) niyad Nov 2023 OP
The non-profit board I was on hired a woman "CEO". Igel Nov 2023 #1

Igel

(35,390 posts)
1. The non-profit board I was on hired a woman "CEO".
Thu Nov 30, 2023, 07:55 PM
Nov 2023

"CEO" was not her job description.

Like the registrar and other women on the board, there was a trait that the "CEO" had: No family.

We interviewed numerous women--white, black, Latino--and picked her over all the men. (1) Woman, (2) not like the others, who said family came first--kids, husband, family time. Asked if there was a problem needing her attention while on vacation, (1) said that her job came first and she'd take calls or fly home. The others said that their family time was precious and she'd delegate it and fix things when she got back. Overtime? "Gotta tuck in my kids." Or, "I have charity work and if I'm busy, it'll have to wait."

One, during the interview, had a message delivered--it was the '90s, no cell phones. "Have to take this call, it's my daughter." When she got back, she realized that we'd decided already. "Obviously you don't respect me, so I withdraw my application." (Yeah, we felt so respected ourselves.)

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