Women, culturally diverse workers shut out of nation's top jobs

If you want to make it to the top in Australian business, being a man, statistically gives you the greatest advantage, and now new research shows your cultural background may also come into play.

Pedestrians walk past the

File image of Hyde Park. Source: AAP

New research has found it's not just women who are disadvantaged when it comes to pay and promotions - people of different cultural backgrounds are struggling as well.

The Diversity Council of Australia has found the top tiers of ASX companies are lacking when it comes to diversity.

For example, in 2015, 64 per cent of ASX company directors were Anglo-Celtic men compared to 5.7 per cent of Anglo-Celtic women.

Men from a background other than Anglo-Celtic made up 27.8 per cent, compared just 2.5 per cent of women from other ethnic groups.
Ming Long is one of those who has often found herself in the minority in boardroom meetings.

The Malaysian born non-executive director told SBS News she was often the only non-Anglo woman in the room.

"You notice many times that you're the only female there, and then you also notice that you're the most culturally diverse person there - of a different ethnic background too, so you are really the odd one out," she said.

Diversity Council of Australia chief executive Lisa Annese said institutional bias made it difficult for women, and especially culturally diverse women, to succeed.

"There's a hierarchy and a structure in place that has a preference for a particular type of individual, and that usually doesn't include many women,” she said.

“For women of culturally diverse backgrounds - where women have a bind of being not only female, but also culturally diverse - these two factors combine together to create a double-disadvantage."

The disadvantage doesn’t end there. The Diversity Council research coincides with annual equity data from Bankwest showing a $93,000 dollar pay gap exists between men and women in top tier management.

Ms Long said companies needed to introduce targets to tackle unconscious bias in recruitment and promotion.

“It’s that bias that comes in – you want to recruit someone that looks like you, sounds like you, have had all the same experiences as you,” she said.

“But what I know is that, as a leader, if you keep on finding people just like you, what happens over time is you become blind to other opportunities and I think bias does make you blind to judgments that you are making that isn’t really legitimate or based on merit.”

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Published 2 March 2017 5:44pm
Updated 3 March 2017 7:47am
By Brianna Roberts


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