Daily Mail

Sexism in the City under investigat­ion

- By Lola Wright

MPs have launched an inquiry into sexism in financial services amid fears the City remains a male- dominated place of work.

The Treasury Committee, which in a report five years ago criticised the ‘alpha male’ culture in finance, will explore if progress has been made since then.

The latest probe comes amid a string of sexual misconduct allegation­s against hedge fund tycoon Crispin Odey and senior members of the CBI.

Committee chairman and Conservati­ve MP Harriett Baldwin said: ‘We’d like to know whether women feel more supported in the financial services industry than at the time of the previous committee’s inquiry five years ago.

‘ We’ll be investigat­ing if enough work has been done to build more supportive workplace cultures, how harassment and misogyny can be addressed, and the role the Government and regulator should play in role-modelling behaviours.’ Four years ago, the Government made it mandatory for organisati­ons with over 250 employees to publish an annual pay gap report.

It has since emerged that the financial services industry is the sector with the worst gender pay gap in the country, standing at 26.6pc compared to the national average of 12.1pc. Laura Whitcombe, global campaign manager of the 30% Club, which campaigns for gender diversity on boards, said: ‘Looking across industries, financial services have lagged behind many others for gender equality, though progress is being made, albeit slowly.

‘ We’ve gone from 12pc women board members in the FTSE 100 in 2010 to just over 40pc today. Yet there are currently only ten female chief executives in the FTSE 100.’

She added: ‘ Research by McKinsey and Lean In points to a leaky pipeline of female talent throughout organisati­ons, including a broken rung at the first step from entry level to manager, where women are significan­tly less likely than men to be promoted.’

Whitcome went on: ‘Women were more likely to report feeling burned out than men.

‘We’ve seen that long hours and elements of the traditiona­l masculine work environmen­t, such as a lack of flexibilit­y, remain in some financial services companies and in part explains the relatively wide gender pay gap and low female representa­tion in senior positions.’

Among the most high-profile female chief executives in the FTSE 100 are Amanda Blanc at Aviva and Alison Rose at NatWest, as well as Emma Walmsley at GSK and Liv Garfield at Severn Trent.

‘Only ten female bosses in FTSE 100’

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