International Women’s Day: female leadership in Asia-Pacific businesses is shrinking as flexible working arrangements are dismantled, Grant Thornton says
- ‘Advancement in the representation of women in senior management within the mid-market sector has been disappointingly slow,’ Grant Thornton’s Mabel Chan says
- Flexible working arrangements also crucial for Hong Kong, which is trying to address shortages in its labour market
The proportion of women holding senior management positions in mid-market businesses in the region has dropped to 31 per cent this year, one percentage point lower than 2023, the firm said in a report released on Friday. Latin America leads the world with a representation of 36 per cent, it added.
Grant Thornton defines mid-market businesses as those with annual revenue between US$5 million and US$500 million in mainland China, and those with sales between US$100 million and US$4 billion annually in the United States. In Europe, employers with a staff of 50 to 500 fall into this category.
“The advancement in the representation of women in senior management within the mid-market sector has been disappointingly slow,” said Mabel Chan, deputy managing partner at Grant Thornton’s Hong Kong office. “We urge businesses to proactively take concrete measures to hasten progress towards gender parity.”
The Grant Thornton report is based on the conclusions of a survey of about 5,000 mid-market companies in 28 countries between October and December last year. The survey found that the trend of return to office had deprived women of flexible working arrangements, a key element empowering female corporate leadership.