KPMG and the African American Directors Forum analyze African American representation on the boards of public Fortune 1000 companies.
Board composition remains in sharp focus as boards continue efforts to increase their diversity amid ongoing calls for boardrooms to better reflect the diversity of the customers they serve, their employees, and the communities in which they operate. Unfortunately, studies of the racial and ethnic backgrounds of directors and executives have historically been limited by a lack of data.
However, the growing list of global regulations related to board diversity disclosures, including Nasdaq’s Board Diversity Rule, as well as institutional investors’ and proxy advisory firms’ expectations for transparency reflected in their updated proxy voting policies have begun to have an impact. Despite this progress, thorough studies of the racial and ethnic background of corporate directors require laborious research and are rarely conducted. To fill this gap in the study of diversity of corporate leadership and American boardrooms, the KPMG Board Leadership Center (BLC) partnered with the African American Directors Forum (AADF) to publish our inaugural study examining African American representation on public Fortune 1000 boards in 2020.
The increased attention to systemic racism following the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 and subsequent widespread protests helped to bring attention to the underrepresentation of African Americans in U.S. boardrooms. Numerous stakeholders acknowledged the need to increase the representation of African Americans in the boardroom and many companies added African American directors to their board after June 2020.
Our follow-up study in 2022 finds that although there is still work to be done, significant progress has been made, particularly since the social justice movement in the spring of 2020.
African American representation on Fortune 1000 boards: 2022 Edition
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