The mission shows the US space agency has made significant progress since its founding in the 1950s.
An overwhelming 82.5 percent of directors among Fortune 500 company boards are white, according to the latest Board Diversity Census.
Many United States companies have rushed to appoint Black members to their boards of directors since racial justice protests swept the country last year.
But in the two preceding years, progress on increasing racial diversity on boards stagnated, a new study revealed on Tuesday. Black men even lost ground.
The Board Diversity Census, conducted by the Alliance for Board Diversity and the consulting firm Deloitte, points to the steep deficit companies face when it comes to fulfilling pledges to diversity in their ranks. An overwhelming 82.5 percent of directors among Fortune 500 company boards are white, according to the census.
The census suggests that, until the May 2020 police killing of George Floyd galvanised a national reckoning on systemic racism, attention to racial diversity took something of a back seat to gender equality in boardrooms.
Between July 2020 and May 2021, some 32 percent of newly appointed board members in the S&P 500 were Black, according to an analysis by ISS Corporate Solutions, which advises companies on improving shareholder value and reducing risk. That was a leap compared to 11 percent during the previous year.
In a telling finding, the number of Black men on Fortune 500 boards fell by 1.5 percent between 2018 and June 2020, even as the representation of Black women rose by 18 percent [File: Joshua S. Kelly-USA TODAY Sports]
In contrast, the number of racial minorities on Fortune 500 boards rose by just above a percentage point. That was a slower pace than the 2 percent increase during the previous two years. In a telling finding, the number of Black men on Fortune 500 boards fell by 1.5 percent between 2018 and June 2020, even as the representation of Black women rose by 18 percent.
Attention to gender equality did bolster the ranks of minority women on Fortune 500 boards, though their numbers remain small at 6 percent, according to the census. The number of minority men remained virtually unchanged at just under 12 percent.
With racial minorities holding so few seats to begin with, the findings underscore the need to pick up the pace of change, said Linda Akutagawa, chair for the Alliance for Board Diversity.
Asian, Hispanic and Black women directors made the biggest percentage increases since 2018. But the raw number of seats each of those groups gained paled in comparison to the 209 seats gained by white women, according to the study. White women held three new seats for every new seat occupied by a woman from a racial minority.
Asian, Hispanic and Black women directors made the biggest percentage increases since 2018. But the raw number of seats each of those groups gained paled in comparison to the 209 seats gained by white women, according to the census [File: Maya Alleruzzo/AP]
Over the past year, more pressure has arisen for boards to focus on racial diversity. California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a new law last year giving companies until the end of 2021 to have at least one board member from an underrepresented ethnic community, or who identifies as LGBT. In December, Nasdaq filed a proposal with the US Securities and Exchange Commission to adopt new listing rules requiring companies to publicly disclose their board diversity statistics.
More than a dozen companies, including Zillow and M.M.LaFleur, signed a pledge in September to add at least one Black director to their boards within a year.
Carey Oven, national managing partner of Deloitte’s Center for Board Effectiveness, said that kind of rapid shift shows that progress on diversity is a matter of corporate will, rather than a lack of qualified minority candidates.
“It’s really a choice for boards to take steps to become more diverse,” Oven said.
In April, 140 racial justice leaders published a letter in the Financial Times demanding that the country’s largest asset managers oppose all-white boards at this year’s shareholder meetings. But the letter also called for them to oppose boards “with arguably token representation by a single person of color”.
“Boards draw a circle around everyone who is not a white male and call themselves diverse,” said Eli Kasargod-Staub, executive director of Majority Action, a non-profit group that sponsored the letter. “That way of framing it often obscures that fact that they only have one person of colour on their boards.”
In December, Majority Action, along with the Service Employees International Union, released a report showing that 56 of the S&P 500 companies had all-white boards as of November 2020. The asset manager BlackRock voted to approve the entire board at 52 of those companies at their 2020 shareholder meetings, according to the report, which cited research from ISS Analytics and public filings. Vanguard voted to support the entire board at 51 of the companies.
Some fund giants have acknowledged they have been slower to push boardrooms to appoint more people of colour, compared to their advocacy to add more women. But many say the momentum is turning.
BlackRock said this year that it’s raising its expectations for ethnic and gender diversity on corporate boards, and it voted against more than 130 boards in the early part of 2021 due to a lack of it. But it does not have a bright-line rule for how many people of colour should be on a board, similar to how it expects US companies to have at least two women on their boards.
BlackRock said this year that it’s raising its expectations for ethnic and gender diversity on corporate boards, and it voted against more than 130 boards in the early part of 2021 due to a lack of it [File: Lucas Jackson/Reuters]
State Street Global Advisors, the company behind the “Fearless Girl” statue that stared down the iconic charging bull statue near Wall Street, said it will start voting against the chair of the board nominating committee at S&P 500 companies next year if it doesn’t have at least one underrepresented minority. This year, it began voting against nominating committee chairs of companies that fail to disclose the racial and ethnic composition of their boards.
“We did see that progress was not being made quickly enough,” said Benjamin Colton, State Street’s global co-head of asset stewardship. “It was difficult for us to even gauge progress because we did not have that disclosure available.”