Men Chafe as Norway Ushers Women Into
Boardroom
By RICHARD BERNSTEIN
January 8, 2006 - (New York Times) On the first
day of this year - and in the teeth of strenuous opposition from
many Norwegian businessmen - Norway's leftist government put into
effect one of the more radical attempts to achieve sexual equality:
requiring that in the next two years 40 percent of the board members
of the nation's large, publicly traded private companies be women.
"The government's decision is to see to it
that women will have a place where the power is, where leadership
takes place in this society," Karita Bekkemellem, Norway's
minister of children and equality, said in an interview here.
"This is very forceful affirmative action,
but it will set an example for other centers of society,"
she said.
Ms. Bekkemellem, and other supporters of the law
are pleased with some of the early results. Already in Norway,
for example, databases have emerged where thousands of women looking
for board positions have listed their names and qualifications,
and any of the 519 private corporations affected can search for
prospective board members.
Executive recruiting companies are said to be very
busy meeting the demand for women with business experience. Already
in the past couple of years, in anticipation of the law taking
effect, the representation of women on corporate boards increased
to 16 percent from roughly 8 percent.
But the fact that Norway's government felt it necessary
to set a quota for women in the top ranks of business and to enforce
it as a matter of law - the penalty for noncompliance is the disbandment
of the offending corporation - reflects a fact of European life
that goes well beyond Norway.
It is that the major countries of Europe are doing
quite badly in promoting women to positions of power in business
and, more generally, in achieving other sorts of diversity, especially
racial and ethnic.
"Foreigners, women and minorities are almost
completely excluded from the top of the business heap," Marta
Dassü and Daniel Franklin wrote in an article that appeared
in The Financial Times late last year, summarizing a study of
450 European companies by the Aspen Institute Italia with the
Economist Intelligence Unit.
Not surprisingly, the study found that women and
minorities "are making slow inroads" in Britain and
Scandinavia, but "all the surveyed nations have a dismal
number of nonwhite males in top executive roles, if any at all."
Only 2 of the 75 British organizations surveyed are led by women,
the study found. In all of the 450 companies, only one, Vodafone
of Britain, was led by a member of an ethnic minority.
The situation seems paradoxical given other elements
of the European picture. Half or more of university graduates
are women in many countries, and women are increasingly visible
in politics, the media and elsewhere in public life.
The paradox seems especially sharp in Germany, which
late last year for the first time elected a woman as chancellor,
Angela Merkel. About half of university graduates are women in
Germany, one-third of the members of Parliament are women; one-third
of the doctorates awarded go to women.
But among the top 30 companies of the German stock
exchange, only one board member is a woman. She is Karin Dorrepaal,
elected a year and a half ago to the board of Schering Group,
the big drug company.
"Compared to other western European countries,
Germany is in the rear guard of the emancipation," Alice
Schwarzer, perhaps Germany's most prominent feminist commentator,
wrote via e-mail. Even in areas where women appear to have made
progress, like politics, the advance is more a matter of appearances
than real power, she said.
"The women's representation of one-third in
Parliament and in the cabinet has led to a situation where powerful
politicians withdrew from democratic bodies and made their politics
in their separate back rooms," she said, referring to the
socialist-led coalition government of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
that governed for seven years before Mrs. Merkel took office.
"That's why the mere existence of a female
chancellor, no matter what she does, will shake up all the existing
structures," Ms. Schwarzer said.
If women are at least numerically well represented
in such other areas of life as academia, television and politics,
why not in business? Some 40 percent of the students at Norway's
business schools are women. Why are so few women on corporate
boards?
The Norwegian answer is clear: The men's club of
corporate boards does not want to admit them. The law on sexual
equality in business, adopted at the end of 2003 by the previous
conservative government, was put into effect this year because
voluntary measures to increase the representation of women in
business failed, and some sort of legislative coercion was deemed
necessary.
"Until recently, we didn't see any change,"
Elizabeth Grieg, director of a family-run shipping company, said
in an interview. "It was all talk about women in business
and very little movement."
But other European women deny that the problem for
women is the glass ceiling or the men's club. In Germany, for
example, Sonja Müller the managing director of Victress,
an organization formed a year ago to help women get into business,
argues that the business door is open but that women, looking
for different, more balanced lives, have not been interested in
entering.
"There's nothing that stops them except themselves,"
Ms. Müller said in an interview in her office in Berlin,
where, in addition to Victress, she runs a profit-making consulting
company. She was asked if Germany's new chancellor should make
a special effort to put women into important positions.
"What I like about Mrs. Merkel is that she
doesn't make being a female a topic," Ms. Müller said.
"It would be horrible if she put lots of women into posts
because they are women. That would be the opposite of gender equality."
In Norway, Trygve Hegnar, editor and owner of a
business daily and a business biweekly, Kapital, is a leading
opponent of the new law, arguing that requiring absolute equality
seems nice as an abstraction but does not work in the real world.
Moreover, he says, it is contrary to the principles of a free
society to tell private businessmen whom they must put on their
corporate boards.
"Ninety percent of the businessmen are against
it," he said, "and most of the people in favor are politicians."
Still, he said, businessmen will comply with the law, which means
that about 700 board seats will go to women in the next two years,
a large number for a country with a population of 4.5 million.
"They say it will be just as good," Mr.
Hegnar said. "And maybe it's true. We haven't seen it yet."
From: http://www.wunrn.com