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Optics to outcome: Corporate India needs to do more on diversity | Current Affairs | Vision IAS

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Optics to outcome: Corporate India needs to do more on diversity

2 min read

Gender Diversity in Corporate India

Current Statistics and Challenges

  • Women hold only 21% of board seats in India.
  • A mere 5% of National Stock Exchange-listed firms have women as CEOs or managing directors.
  • 63.45% of listed companies lack women in key leadership roles, according to the Marching Sheep Inclusion Index 2025.

Gender Diversity: An Economic and Strategic Imperative

  • Companies with higher inclusion report higher net profits than their peers, reflecting that diversity makes commercial sense beyond being a moral issue.
  • There is a "missing middle" in gender representation; women are present in entry-level roles and at the top but underrepresented at the middle-management level.
  • Women are often placed in functions like human resources and corporate social responsibility rather than in core business units like finance and operations, which remain male-dominated.

Implications and Way Forward

  • The lack of gender diversity in critical business functions not only limits women's career growth but also impacts the quality of decision-making within companies.
  • Women constitute just 22% of corporate employees, even less than their participation in the general workforce.
  • To harness India's demographic dividend, inclusion must be genuine. Companies should track gender-disaggregated metrics across recruitment, attrition, pay, and promotion.
  • Structured mentorship, sponsorship, and leadership training should be provided to high-potential women, especially in finance and operations.

Supportive Work Environments and Policy Recommendations

  • Policies like flexible schedules, parental leave, and re-entry programs are essential for enabling productivity.
  • Regulators should encourage voluntary disclosures on gender in various roles, similar to ESG frameworks.
  • Investors are increasingly considering diversity in their evaluations of corporate governance and long-term risk.

Conclusion

Corporate India must move from symbolic inclusion to substantive influence by empowering women with authority, resources, and decision-making powers. The ultimate goal is to build resilient, innovative, and future-ready organizations through gender-balanced leadership.

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  • Gender Diversity in Corporate India
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