Mary Barra |
This shouldn’t come as a surprise. For the sixth year straight, German Chancellor Angela Merkel tops Forbes list of the world's most powerful women.
With the recent listing of 100 World’s Most Powerful Women, Forbes top five starts with Angela Merkel, then Hillary Clinton, the first woman to contest a presidential election in the United States of America; Janet Yellen, the American economist who is the Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; followed by Melinda Gates, co-chair, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; and the fifth is Mary Barra, the first female CEO, General Motors. There are more on the list.
According to Forbes, “They are the smartest and toughest female business leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, scientists, philanthropists and CEOs making their mark in the world today. They’re women who are building billion-dollar brands, calling the shots in the financial markets, and crisscrossing the globe to broker international agreements and provide aid.Their accomplishments are formidable on their own, and even more so given how hard it can be to establish inroads into industries and job titles traditionally dominated by men. Statistics on women in positions of power remain bleak. According to the latest survey by Catalyst, a nonprofit that tracks gender parity in the workplace, women occupy a measly four per cent of corner offices at S&P 500 companies. And they hold only 25 per cent of executive or senior-level jobs in those same firms.”
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