, the Luxembourg Women in Finance Charter celebrated its first anniversary on 8 March 2024 with the publication of its baseline report. The survey covers the current status of female representation within the charter signatories and their targets to boost gender diversity and balance.
“I welcome the launch of the first ‘Women in Finance Charter’ report,” said Luxembourg’s finance minister (CSV) in a press release. “Together, we are setting a path for meaningful change, ensuring that our financial sector leads by example when it comes to encouraging gender inclusivity and increasing female representation in decision-making positions.”
The charter includes 71 signatories: 34 banking organisations, 15 insurance & reinsurance organisations, 10 super management companies and alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs), five financial associations, four specialised professionals of the financial sector (PSF) and three investment firms. Together, they represent roughly 28,000 employees.
Here are a few takeaways from the report.
Women hold 28% of senior managerial roles
Amongst the signatories, only about a quarter (28%) of senior managerial roles are held by women. At middle and junior management level, 39% of roles are held by women, while at the level with no managerial responsibilities, gender is balanced.
By sub-sector, associations have the highest representation of women in managerial positions.
18% of female employees have senior managerial roles
Although men and women are equally represented in the financial sector, the report found that 31% of men hold senior managerial roles (board, executive committee and senior management level); that figure drops to 18% for women.
Looking at each sub-sector, the survey found that for 9% of women employed at investment firms work at the board level. Amongst male employees, that figure is 4%.
But for super mancos & AIFMs, the report found the opposite: 6% of all female employees work at the board level, while for male employees, the percentage stands at 15%.
Targets for improvement
The report noted that signatories aim to improve gender balance by improving hiring practices (35 signatories), carrying out leadership programmes (30 signatories), monitoring diversity metrics (22 signatories) and promoting a culture of inclusion (20 signatories).
“Signatories have set the average target of reaching 39% of female representation at senior management level, 32% at board level, and 33% at executive committee/C- suite level,” noted the report. These targets are spread from 2024 to 2030. Around half (53%) of the 174 target deadlines have been set for 2024 or 2025.
Find the full report and the full list of charter signatories .