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German minister eyes quotas for female execs unless firms step up

by Reuters
Tuesday, 15 August 2017 18:23 GMT

CEOs of German car making industry meet with German federal ministers at the Federal Ministry of the Interior to discuss the future of diesel vehicles, after a nearly two-year saga of scandal spread from Volkswagen to others in the sector in Berlin, Germany, August 2, 2017. REUTERS/Axel Schmidt/POOL

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"I give industry one more year to take care of the issue itself"

BERLIN, Aug 15 (Reuters) - A government minister on Tuesday blasted German companies for failing to add more women to their management boards, suggesting the government could impose quotas unless firms acted to boost the current rate of 6 percent.

Family Minister Katarina Barley, a Social Democrat (SPD), told the RND newspaper chain it was unacceptable that companies had failed to increase the percentage of women in leadership roles after years of promises.

"I give industry one more year to take care of the issue itself. If nothing has happened by then, we'll have to take legislative action," Barley told the newspapers in an interview to be published Wednesday.

"In many management boards, nothing has happened. Only 6 percent of directors are women. That can't continue," she said.

Barley is due to present a report to Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet about representation of women in leadership positions on Wednesday.

She said she had "no problem with an obligatory quota for women on management boards", noting that years of pledges had not changed the situation and many companies had a target of zero.

Under German law, women must comprise 30 percent of the supervisory boards of large companies. But there is no law governing the make-up of management boards.

Barley's Social Democrats are now the junior partner to Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives in a "grand coalition," but both parties hope to forge alliances with other small parties and lead the country after a parliamentary election on Sept. 24.

The latest Insa poll showed Merkel's conservatives with 37 percent support, the SPD with 25 percent, and the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party with 10 percent. Both the pro-business Free Democrats and the far-left Left party had 9 percent support, while the pro-environment Greens were at 3 percent.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

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