According to a global survey by Grant Thornton - Women in business: New perspectives on risk and reward, India ranked third lowest in having women in leadership roles for the third consecutive year after Japan where only 7 per cent of senior level executives are women and Argentina (15 per cent).
Besides, Russia the other two countries that have significant percentage of women in senior management roles include Indonesia (46 per cent) and Estonia (40 per cent).
The survey also noted that only 7 per cent of the senior management (CEO/ Managing Director) roles were held by women in India. The most common roles held by women in India are Human Resources Director (25 per cent) and Corporate Controller (18 per cent).
"Embracing diversity is no longer a feminist notion but an essential on the corporate agenda as it helps drive efficiencies and effectiveness within teams, functions and organisations," Radhika Jain, Director, Grant Thornton Advisory Private Limited said.
Eastern Europe performed best, with 38 per cent of senior roles held by women in 2017 and just 9 per cent of businesses with no women in senior management.
Meanwhile Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey saw the most improvement, with the proportion of senior roles held by women rising from 24 per cent in 2016 to 28 per cent in 2017 and the percentage of businesses with no women in senior management falling from 36 per cent in 2016 to 27 per cent in 2017.
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