Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

From Merkel to May, will women soon run the world?

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and leader of the Christian Democratic Union party CDU stands in front of her election campaign tour bus before a CDU board meeting in Berlin September 16, 2013. Merkel's allies of the Bavarian Christian Social Union party CSU swept to victory in a state election in Bavaria on Sunday, regaining the absolute assembly majority they lost in 2008 and providing a show of conservative strength for the chancellor a week before Germany goes to the polls.

From CEO suites to the corridors of power, women are closing the leadership gender gap Image: REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

Keith Breene
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In the United States and the United Kingdom, and even at the United Nations, there’s a buzz around women in power at the moment.

Hilary Clinton is in a strong position to become the next president of the United States.

The UK doesn’t yet know who its next prime minister will be, but it does know she will definitely be a woman, with the shortlist down to Teresa May and Andrea Leadsom.

With the opposition Labour Party in disarray, there is talk of current leader Jeremy Corbyn being challenged by Angela Eagle. Scotland, meanwhile, is led by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. In fact, all three of the main political parties in Scotland are now led by women.

And with the UK’s recent decision to leave the European Union, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s power has been even further enhanced.

Meanwhile, former UN Climate Chief Christiana Figueres has been nominated as a candidate to be next UN secretary-general.

It feels, for once, like women are tipping the balance when it comes to the key positions of power in politics. But their achievements haven’t come out of nowhere: in fact, women have been doing well in politics in quite a few places for quite a while now.

In fact, there are now two countries in the world with more women than men in parliament: Rwanda and Bolivia.

 The countries with the highest percentage of female MPs
Image: Inter-Parliamentary Union

Africa features heavily in the top 10 with Senegal, Seychelles and South Africa following behind Rwanda. Senegal comes sixth, with a parliament that is 43% women; and South Africa is joint seventh, with 42% of its parliament women.

Nordic countries also feature strongly, with Sweden and Finland making it into the top 10.

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau named a young and ethnically diverse cabinet, with a ministerial team that, for the first time in the country’s history, is equally balanced between men and women.

The ministers – 15 women and 15 men – are mostly aged under 50, thanks to a recruitment drive that marked both a generational change and a commitment to reflecting Canada’s diversity.

It’s not just in politics that women have been reaching the top of their profession. Christine Lagarde is to serve a second term as head of the International Monetary Fund, Janet Yellen leads the US Federal Reserve and Mary Barra, as CEO and Chair of General Motors, is one of a growing band of high-profile businesswomen.

The leadership gender gap isn’t entirely closed, however. The US and UK – while on the cusp of having female political leaders – are lacking when it comes to parliamentary representation. The US Senate is just 20% female, and more than 80% of the House of Representatives members, and 88% of governors, are men. At Westminster it is just 29%.

So, to quote Australia’s first female Prime Minister Julia Gillard, when it comes to viewing how women are doing in positions of power around the world in the light of those about to take power: “It doesn't explain everything, it doesn't explain nothing.”

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Equity, Diversity and InclusionEconomic Growth
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