Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
International

CIBC to set target numbers for women on board, in senior executive roles: CEO

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2015 12:42 PM
    TORONTO — CIBC plans to set formal targets this year for the number of women on its board of directors and in executive officer positions, the bank's CEO said Tuesday.
     
    "In business, people respond to targets," Victor Dodig said during a roundtable hosted by the Ontario Securities Commission on the issue of gender diversity on corporate boards.
     
    In a joint initiative with other securities regulators, the OSC released a review Monday of a new "comply and explain" policy that requires publicly traded companies to disclose certain statistics around the representation of women on their boards and in executive officer positions.
     
    Regulators in every province and territory except for Prince Edward Island, Alberta and British Columbia implemented rule amendments at the end of last year requiring issuers to provide targets for how many women should sit on their boards or in executive officer roles.
     
    The rule changes also require companies to disclose their policies relating to how women are identified and nominated for such posts.
     
    If an issuer chooses not to implement targets for female composition and other related policies, it must explain why it has chosen not to comply.
     
    More than half — 51 per cent — of the 722 companies included in the review disclosed that they do not have even one woman on their boards, while 40 per cent reported no women in executive officer positions.
     
    Only seven per cent — or 49 issuers — said they have a target in place for the number of women that should sit on their board. And only 11 companies reported setting a target for the number of executive officers, representing about two per cent.
     
    The most commonly cited reason for not setting targets was that candidates are chosen based on merit, not gender.
     
    Dodig said roughly 30 per cent of CIBC's (TSX:CM) directors are women, while the rate of female representation in executive officer roles is in the "high 20s."
     
    "Our goal is to continue to move that upwards because we think it's good for the company, it's good for our culture, it's good for business," Dodig said. "It's very straightforward for us."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Four nabbed, jailed for murders of Miss Honduras, sister

    Four nabbed, jailed for murders of Miss Honduras, sister
    Four people involved in the murder of Miss Honduras World Maria Jose Alvarado and her sister Sofia Trinidad, whose bodies were buried Thursday...

    Four nabbed, jailed for murders of Miss Honduras, sister

    Leader killed in US drone attack, confirms Al Qaeda

    Leader killed in US drone attack, confirms Al Qaeda
    Global terrorist organisation Al Qaeda's branch in the Indian sub-continent Thursday confirmed the death of one of its leaders, Adil Qudoos in a US drone attack....

    Leader killed in US drone attack, confirms Al Qaeda

    Norway to launch designer passports

    Norway to launch designer passports
    Norwegian passports will soon go stylish as the country's National Police Directorate has announced the winner of a competition to redesign the document....

    Norway to launch designer passports

    Obama shows benevolence to illegal immigrants

    Obama shows benevolence to illegal immigrants
    Asserting his authority, a defiant President Barack Obama resorted to unilateral executive action to fix America's broken immigration system and protect...

    Obama shows benevolence to illegal immigrants

    Obama to millions of undocumented immigrants: 'You can come out of the shadows'

    Obama to millions of undocumented immigrants: 'You can come out of the shadows'
    WASHINGTON — If you took the millions of people touched by U.S. President Barack Obama's immigration announcement Thursday and gathered them together, their ranks would rival the population of Canada.

    Obama to millions of undocumented immigrants: 'You can come out of the shadows'

    Lone Indian American Lawmaker Ami Bera Stages Comeback Win

    Lone Indian American Lawmaker Ami Bera Stages Comeback Win
    Amerish 'Ami' Bera, the lone Indian American lawmaker in the US House of Representatives, repeated history as he edged out his Republican opponent in a California race two weeks after the elections.

    Lone Indian American Lawmaker Ami Bera Stages Comeback Win