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There is no shortage of female leaders. There is a lack of women in leadership positions

2024-03-08T05:07:31.098Z

Highlights: Women in Latin America and the Caribbean are more educated than men. Women's labor participation has increased from 55% to 63%. There is a lack of more women in leadership positions. Investing in policies that promote female leadership is not a zero-sum game, says María Gómez-González, vice-president of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) The achievement of women leaders is notable, since being a woman leader is difficult, she says.


Obstacles remain for women to reach leadership positions, despite having the necessary qualifications. We must put policies in place to close the leadership gap.


Banco do Brasil, GM and Waze have female leaders.

It is highly likely that Mexico, for the first time in its history, will have a female president.

There are also good indicators on other fronts.

Women in Latin America and the Caribbean today are more educated than men.

Between 2000 and 2019, their labor participation has increased from 55% to 63%, although it is still insufficient to close the gap compared to men.

We are an example of female leadership.

We are at the head of two vice-presidencies of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and we are responsible for the operational areas and technical knowledge.

Half of the employees in our vice presidencies are women.

On International Women's Day, there is a trend of celebrating women leaders.

This is important, but it is a biased view.

We must ask ourselves why many do not reach high positions, despite their educational achievements.

There is a lack of more women in leadership positions.

Gender gaps in leadership positions are seen at all levels in our region, from low representation in governments (only 25% of ministerial positions) to seats on company boards of directors (20% of seats).

The multilateral institutions where we work are no exception.

Data from the IDB, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund indicate that the three organizations have less than 30% female representation on their boards.

Other women exercise silent leadership, without due social or economic recognition.

We are referring to the woman who runs a stall in the local market, who negotiates with suppliers and maintains the accounting record.

In our region, there are more than 560,000 MSMEs led by women.

They have difficulties obtaining financing and integrating into value chains.

A study in Chile revealed that women's credit applications, under conditions equivalent to those of men, were 18.3% less likely to be approved than men's applications, largely due to biased or prejudiced decisions. of executives, particularly men, and not because they have a greater risk of defaulting on payments.

These examples and the statistical evidence from many studies say it clearly: obstacles persist for women reaching leadership positions, despite having the necessary qualifications.

We must put policies in place to close the leadership gap.

One solution used is representation quotas.

First adopted in Norway, quotas have been used to expand women's participation on boards of directors in Colombia, Costa Rica, Peru, Chile, Mexico and Panama, among others.

They have been effective initially, but IDB research finds that parity is significantly reduced for higher executive positions.

The unequal burden of care and domestic work, the lack of childcare services and social norms are obstacles to women's career progression.

Expanding child care services has proven effective.

In Mexico, a care service for working mothers with children aged 0 to 3 years increased their labor participation by 4.5 percentage points.

According to a study in 15 countries in the region, maternity and paternity leaves, by promoting a better distribution of care burdens and increasing men's commitment to caring for their children, contribute to increasing female labor participation and reducing gender gaps in income.

Another solution is for women to receive financing with credit scores and innovative financing methods.

In Chile, the public prosecutor platform Chilecompra provided certification, training, and mentoring to companies run by women, and favored their participation and experience in public procurement processes.

Investing in policies that promote female leadership is not a zero-sum game, where women win and men lose.

By excluding women from opportunities, society is wasting their potential.

We lose women and countries lose.

A study carried out by the IDB showed that, in Brazil, cities that had a female mayor reported fewer deaths during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The achievement of women leaders is notable, since being a woman leader is difficult.

We are often subject to more scrutiny to validate our promotions, a kind of micro-machismo that women face daily.

Women contribute so much and we can contribute much more.

We need men and women leaders who make the extra effort to remove the obstacles that prevent women from realizing their full potential.

We need governments to invest in girls, care systems and education so that we all have the same opportunities.

Anabel González

is vice president of Countries and

Ana María Ibáñez

is vice president of Sectors and Knowledge of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). 

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2024-03-08

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