47% of companies in Egypt have female board members: IFC

Nehal Samir
3 Min Read

47% of companies in Egypt have female board members, and women represent 14% of all board members, said Yehia El-Husseiny, corporate governance projects manager in Middle East and North Africa in the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

He announced on Sunday that the IFC, a World Bank Group member, conducted a new study on the importance of having women on compnaies’ boards in Egypt.

El-Husseiny declared that the analysis focused on two main groups of companies, one is the privately held companies, and the other is the public listed companies, noting that the group of private companies was further divided to compare between firms with and without gender-diverse workforce. The public listed company’s category included companies listed on the Egyptian Exchange as well as the Nile Stock Exchange for small and medium enterprises (NILEX).

“39% of firms have one or two female board members and 8% have three or more, meanwhile the average board size is 6.1 members (6.7 for companies with women on boards and 5.6 for companies with all male boards),” he stated.

He noted that women’s representation in board councils in developed and emerging markets in the Middle East stood at 17,20 and 10,2%, respectively.

“This study is very important as today women represent nearly half of the Egypt’s college graduates, however only 23% of women participate in the labour force, which means that there is about 27% of the female graduates do not enter the workforce,” El-Husseiny stated. “And very few reach the upper echelons of the corporate world,” he continued.

He assured that the study found that gender-diverse boards lead to stronger financial performance.

In that term, he noted that improving the gender parity globally by 25% would increase the global GDP by $5.3tn, pointing out that women now represent only 39.35% of the global labour force.

El-Husseiny concluded that the study quantifies the relationship between gender diversity on corporate boards and a company’s financial performance in Egypt, examines the barriers to female participation on boards, highlights the opportunities to increase the number of women on boardrooms, and finally offers recommendations on how to achieve greater gender equality in the boardroom, building pipeline of female business leaders and promoting the gender-equality practices in the Egyptian labour market.

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