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| Money -> Shortage of Asian Managers in the UK | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Entitled "Race: Creating Business Value" it draws on a comprehensive survey of members of Race for Opportunity (RfO), the business network of UK organisations working on race and diversity as a business agenda. It provides a detailed picture of current activity in this area as well as the latest trends and developments, identifying top performers by industry sector. The ten key indicators of organisational performance used in the survey cover leadership and vision, investment, policy and planning, communication, marketing, ownership, employment (selection and retention, development and training), community involvement, supplier development and results/impact. Only 44 Ethnic Managers out of 3 million employeesThe survey shows that despite the fact the organisations surveyed employ almost three million people, only 44 ethnic minority individuals currently hold posts at the most senior level, with no black or other ethnic minority chief executives in any of the private sector organisations. Nor are there any black or Asian Permanent Secretaries in any of the central government departments surveyed. Only 3.4% of senior managers are from ethnic minorities, whilst the overall number at managerial level is 4.1 per cent (11,862 people). Nevertheless, the research shows that significant investment is being made across the board in developing and retaining ethnic minority employees and customers as Britain's major employers increasingly tackle race equality in the workplace, although much remains to be done. Asians in lower-paid retailing jobsThe financial institutions surveyed employ approximately 1.5 million people, but only 1.6 % (23,393 people) are ethnic minorities. The biggest employers of ethnic minority people are the retail sector, where they make up 8.4% of the current workforce, or 46,590 people. Unsurprisingly, the majority of ethnic minority employees are in non-management positions, comprising 8.9% of the 1.2million non-managerial staff in the organisations surveyed. The report builds on the first benchmarking study carried out by RfO in 2001, when 93 organisations reported for the first time ever on their performance on race across ten key indicators. A Business in the Community campaign, RfO this year challenged its network to revisit the reality of what is happening inside and outside of their organisations on race. Ethnic Monitoring on the increaseThere has been progress on a number of fronts, compared with the results of the 2001 survey. Organisations reported on activity in terms of business leadership on race, marketing to ethnic minorities as profitable consumers, diversity-proofing community involvement programmes, and evaluating policies and initiatives. In addition, there has been a significant leap in the number of organisations providing data on the ethnicity of their workforces - 78%, up from 19% of the organisations surveyed in 2001 - reflecting the fact that monitoring is increasingly standard good practice. There has also been growth in terms of real commitment and tangible engagement with the issue areas across organisations. Leadership remains of critical importance (86 per cent of respondents have a Board level 'champion'), although the survey highlights the need to ensure effective programmes across the spectrum of each organisation's activity since much activity on race is still largely driven by human resources and equal opportunities departments.
Copies of "Race: Creating Business Value", price £35 each, are available from Julia Joseph at Race for Opportunity, Telephone 0207 566 8707, Fax 0207 253 1877. Click here to visit the Race for Opportunity website. |
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