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A Vicious Circle in the Workplace
Context:
The tragedy at R G Kar Hospital and the revelations of sexual harassment in the Malayalam film industry highlights the ongoing lack of basic safety for women in the Indian workplace.
More on news
- According to the latest Fortune India list of India’s 500 largest companies, none of the top 100 companies in India are led by women.
- According to a White Paper by Fortune and SPJIMR, only 1.6% of the Fortune 500 companies in India have women CEOs or managing directors.
- This figure only slightly improves to 3.2% when considering the top 1,000 companies.
- While global figures are not much better—China and the US each have about 10.4% women-led Fortune 500 companies—India lags significantly behind.
Significance of More Women in the Workplace
- Improved financial performance: Gender-diverse teams have higher sales and profits compared to male-dominated teams.
- Enhanced creativity and innovation: Women in the workplace foster creativity and innovation, leading to better solutions that outperform homogenous groups.
- Increased productivity: A study by McKinsey suggests that having a gender-diverse workforce can increase overall productivity by 25%.
- Better workplace culture: Organisations with a higher percentage of women predict more job satisfaction, organisational dedication, meaningful work, and less burnout for employees of all genders.
Challenges
- Gender biases and stereotypes: Women are more likely to be perceived based on their appearances rather than skills or talents, and have their judgement questioned more often.
- Discrimination: Women face discrimination at every stage of their careers, from hiring and promotions to compensation and delegation of responsibilities.
- Harassment: A report by Ashoka University’s Centre for Economic Data and Analysis (CEDA) found that while the number of reported harassment cases has increased since 2013-2014—indicating that more women are speaking out—resolutions to these complaints have not kept pace.
- The CEDA study revealed two key issues: many companies report zero harassment cases year after year, suggesting either a lack of mechanisms to address the issue or a very low female employee count.
- Additionally, smaller companies, particularly mid-sized and small ones, rarely report harassment cases, possibly due to inadequate reporting mechanisms or fear of retaliation.
- Part of the issue stems from many organisations failing to establish the required complaints committees under the Protection of Women against Sexual Harassment (POSH) Act of 2013.
- Underrepresentation in leadership: Despite forming 37% of the global workforce, women occupy only a negligible fraction of top positions in India.
- Lack of flexibility: Women value flexibility in where, when and how they work, but are less likely to get this compared to men.
- Intersectional challenges: Women of colour, LGBTQ+, disabled and differently abled women face even greater discrimination compared to other women in the workplace.