• Germany edition
Business & Money
Rene Obermann - on the lookout for a few good women. Photo: DPA

Deutsche Telekom introduces quota for women executives

Published: 15 Mar 10 11:10 CET
Online: http://www.thelocal.de/money/20100315-25883.html

Europe's biggest telecommunications group, Deutsche Telekom, said Monday it would introduce a 30-percent quota for women in senior positions by the end of 2015.

It is the first company listed on Germany's DAX index of blue-chip stocks to take such a stand, and the measure concerns upper and middle management positions, a statement said.

"Having a greater number of women at the top will quite simply enable us to operate better," chief executive Rene Obermann said. "Taking on more women in management positions is not about the enforcement of misconstrued egalitarianism. It is a matter of social fairness and a categorical necessity for our success."

A study by the DIW economic research institute found that only 2.5 percent of management positions within the 200 biggest German companies are held by women. Industrial giant Siemens is the only DAX company to have a woman on its senior board.

Deutsche Telekom personnel director Thomas Sattelberger noted meanwhile that around 60 percent of business graduates from German universities are women.

Norway has already passed a law to ensure more women have access to senior positions, and France and the Netherlands are mulling similar legislation.

Deutsche Telekom said the ratio would be respected in its operations worldwide, and would be "prepared systematically on the basis of targets governing, for example, the recruitment of university graduates, selection processes, talent pools and participation in executive development programs."

German Family Minister Kristina Schröder told the Financial Times Deutschland newspaper Monday that legally binding quotas for women executives should only be a last resort, but was quoted by the Deutsche Telekom statement as saying the group "is setting a fine example."

AFP/The Local (news@thelocal.de)

What do you think? Leave your comment below.

Fark It! Digg This  Share everywhere
Send to a friend Printable version Twitter This

Your comments about this article:

15:02 March 15, 2010 by VaterSteuer
DeutscheTelekom = german gov't so no surprise there.

German Family Minister; no such person, she is the minister of the Department of Families, Seniors, Women and Children.

http://www.bmfsfj.de/

The BMFSFJ is the "Health and Human Services" agency in dland that includes ALL PERSONS EXCEPT UNMARRIED MEN. Get that, all people in dland, except men so would anyone expect an agency that explicitly excludes SINGLE MEN between 18-26 (welfare queens can get money from kids until 27 in dland!) and 67 (retirement)?

The BMFSFJ has lots to say about how bad women have it in dland and that women's rights must prevail.... feminism ... anti family/dad.... etc....

Of course the Frauen Ministry noted above doesn't do much to help the millions of kids in dland that never see dad simply because mom doesn't want dad as part of the kids life.

Needless to say, the "family" ministry only mentions discrimination when it applies to women, never when it's discrimination of men/dads or their kids, especially not in the realm of the BMFSFJ's "responsibility", like family matters.

More here: http://www.thelocal.de/national/20091203-23705.html
22:07 March 16, 2010 by cklb
There should be no quota of any kind for the employment of people in any kind of enterprise. A quota always means discrimination, as not the capable ones get the jobs but the ones fitting the quota. Just look over to some parts of africa and what happend after they introduced a quota for colored people in companies. A quota always is an artificial distortion of the job market and won't lead to an overall benefit of neither the employers nor the society.
11:54 March 17, 2010 by mobiusro
Right you are cklb! Exactly my thoughts - aside form the Africa part about which I know nothing :)
10:11 March 18, 2010 by Shanker Vasudev
Reservation to Women. That is really a nice idea. You can have a look on my native country India. There we have almost 50 % seats are for reservation. Now Govt is going to give 33% reservation to women in Indian Parliament. This reservations will definitely improve the life of Women in India and I think it is a good movement which should be followed by other countries too.

Deutsche Telekom did a right move.
ADD YOUR COMMENT   (YOU MUST LOG IN OR REGISTER TO MAKE A COMMENT)
Business & Money headlines
Photo: DPA

Tourists flock to Germany in 2011

Tourists spent a record number of nights in Germany last year, the country's statistics office said Thursday, with visitors from abroad registering a sharp increase despite gloomy economic conditions. READ »

Photo: DPA

Daimler books record €6-billion profit

German auto giant Daimler, which own Mercedes-Benz, said on Thursday they achieved record sales and profits in 2011, but warned that earnings may be flat this year. READ »

Photo: DPA

Exports top €1 trillion despite euro crisis

German exports topped €1 trillion for the first time in 2011, but fell at year-end as the eurozone debt crisis hit demand for goods made in Germany, official data showed on Wednesday. READ (5 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

GM threatens major job cuts at Opel

German carmaker Opel was left to prepare for the worst on Tuesday as its US parent company General Motors announced “horrendous” fourth quarter losses and warned of factory closures at its ailing European unit. READ (9 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

Court caps Jewish ghetto pension claims

Some 22,000 Jewish people confined to ghettos under the Nazis during World War II are entitled to smaller pension payments than they initially claimed, a German federal court ruled Tuesday. READ (3 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

Industrial orders rise amid eurozone gloom

Germany, the eurozone's biggest economy, saw the release of further favourable economic data on Monday with industrial orders in December partly reversing steep falls seen the previous month. READ »

Photo: DPA

Former spy boss moves to Deutsche Bank

Ernst Uhrlau, former head of Germany’s foreign intelligence agency the BND, has been on the payroll of Germany’s biggest bank since the start of February, just two months after his retirement. READ (2 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

China offers Merkel some comfort for Europe

China's Premier Wen Jiabao said a stable Europe was key to stability at home, in comments published Sunday, at the end of a week that saw Germany's chancellor visit Beijing. READ (8 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

China doesn't want to 'buy Europe'

As German Chancellor Angela Merkel wrapped up her visit to China on Friday, the Asian giant’s leaders promised they had no intention to "buy Europe," amid concerns over growing Chinese investment in debt-stricken eurozone economies. READ (6 COMMENTS) »

Photo: DPA

Deutsche Bank profits fall as debt crisis bites

Deutsche Bank, Germany's biggest bank reported Thursday a bigger-than-expected drop in earnings at the end of last year as the eurozone sovereign debt crisis hurt business. READ »

More Business & Money

See all ads | Join the Marketplace

Jobs in Germany, in English

1327 jobs available
873 new jobs this week
221 new jobs today

ALL JOBS »

Latest Business & Money news from Sweden
News from the Goethe-Institut
News from DeutschlandOnline

Toytown Germany
Germany's English-speaking crowd
English-speaking educators (native level)

Hotel reservations in Berlin
Visiting Berlin anytime soon? Book your hotel in Berlin here.
Rental apartments in Berlin
For home-from-home holiday accommodation, search for a Berlin apartment to rent.
Trade CFDs with InterTrader.com
Start trading shares, equities, forex, etc. No commission on equities; Low min. margins. Apply for a CFDs account now!