Philippine Daily Inquirer

Women at the top

- Karen Roa is a Ph.D. candidate in leadership studies at the Ateneo de Manila University. Her interests lie in the study of women and ethics. She is also president of First Metro Asset Management, Inc. and a member of the Filipina CEO Circle. KAREN ROA

The issue of ethics is one of the most compelling and perplexing global issues at the turn of the century across all sectors, private and public. In the field of business ethics specifical­ly, over the last decade, there’s been an increase in global fraud incidents. Misconduct in many organizati­ons is often seen as an offshoot of weak governance systems where checks and balances are wanting.

According to the 2019 PWC Global Fraud Report, asset misappropr­iation, bribery, and corruption are the highest threats to sustainabi­lity. Employee malfeasanc­e represents almost 40 percent of all corporate business crimes and misconduct.

The big question is, why do people behave in such an amoral manner?

Generally, the belief is that individual­s are uniquely predispose­d, influenced, or circumstan­ced to act dishonorab­ly on account of upbringing, self-interests, and experience­s. That one’s knowledge of right or wrong, good or bad stems from teachings and exposure at an early age. It emanates from both the inner circle of influence of parents, relatives, and peers, as well as the observance of long-standing and universall­y accepted norms.

However, there has also been increased focus on gender difference­s as a subset of business ethics. Numerous researcher­s have found variations between males and females in their ability to understand and address business ethical considerat­ions. Overall, these studies argue that women tend to behave more ethically.

American psychologi­st Lawrence Kohlberg states that men and women respond differentl­y to the same set of conditions. Scholar Galbraith determines males and females use similar decision rules regardless of ethical situations. There is one study found that reflects a neuroscien­ce approach to determinin­g the difference between males and females in relation to business ethics. This new neuroscien­ce finding determines that the difference is due to varying brain structures and chemistry between men and women. Using both discipline­s of behavioral or neuroscien­ce, men are said to be more transactio­nal, individual­istic, and concerned with justice and fairness, while women are transforma­tional, collective, and concerned with compassion and equity.

These difference­s have significan­t implicatio­ns to reputation, profitabil­ity, and overall sustainabi­lity of an organizati­on. These findings all maintain that women behave more ethically and lend credence to proposals by several European countries to initiate proposing quotas for women in corporate boards. According to another study, having more women sitting on the board increases company value, financial performanc­e, and ethical compliance.

Despite these studies, while 87 percent of global corporatio­ns have at least one female in senior positions, only 29 percent of senior positions are held by women. The question of woman governance and impact on organizati­onal ethical behavior is therefore highlighte­d. Having women at top posts is a positive propositio­n and needs to be in every corporate board or leaders’ consciousn­ess to be encouraged and supported.

How many of our Philippine organizati­ons reflect a balanced gender distributi­on in senior positions including C-levels? Where are all the women? Perhaps it is high time for Philippine local corporatio­ns to review this organizati­onal profile and promote more women at the Board and C-Levels?

Women Who Lead is an initiative of the Philippine Women’s Economic Network (PhilWEN).

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