Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations

This inductive study explored the likelihood and correlates of gender diversity in corporate boards in the Philippines. The improvement of gender diversity on boards is of advocacy and policy interest as the country emerges to middle-high income status. Logistic regression analyses from individuals&...

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Main Authors: Bautista, Maria C G, De Leon, Marlene, Nano, Rudyard Jose R, IV
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2020
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/gsb-pubs/55
https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1054&context=gsb-pubs
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.gsb-pubs-10542022-06-16T07:23:21Z Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations Bautista, Maria C G De Leon, Marlene Nano, Rudyard Jose R, IV This inductive study explored the likelihood and correlates of gender diversity in corporate boards in the Philippines. The improvement of gender diversity on boards is of advocacy and policy interest as the country emerges to middle-high income status. Logistic regression analyses from individuals' (in a directors' talent pool) responses to an online survey showed that females had a likely odds of 0.10 to be on the boards, compared to males. For every one female getting onto boards, 9 would be unable to. Females with advanced degrees were 7x likely to be on boards than female and male counterparts. The odds of a board seat is significantly likely for individuals in some industries compared to a referent industry (government). At the firm level, controlling other variables in the model, as the size of boards are increased by a unit, the odds of having a woman on board increase 1.3 times. This implies that the likelihood of having a woman board of director rises if the size of boards is raised by a third. Corroboration from text mining technique applied to survey responses showed strong correlation across academic degrees (both bachelor's and advanced), industry, and job title; pointing that having more women in C-roles increase the odds of increasing their numbers on corporate boards. Gender diversity on boards have been studied largely from the developed economy lens and/or international comparisons. These quantitative explorations showed pathways that can advance not only understanding and support for extant theories (human capital, resource dependence), but also point to further work (institutional, industry) that can provide levers for policy and advocacy, for countries with similar challenges. 2020-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/gsb-pubs/55 https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1054&context=gsb-pubs Graduate School of Business Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo corporate boards logistic regression machine learning Business Business Administration, Management, and Operations
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic corporate boards
logistic regression
machine learning
Business
Business Administration, Management, and Operations
spellingShingle corporate boards
logistic regression
machine learning
Business
Business Administration, Management, and Operations
Bautista, Maria C G
De Leon, Marlene
Nano, Rudyard Jose R, IV
Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
description This inductive study explored the likelihood and correlates of gender diversity in corporate boards in the Philippines. The improvement of gender diversity on boards is of advocacy and policy interest as the country emerges to middle-high income status. Logistic regression analyses from individuals' (in a directors' talent pool) responses to an online survey showed that females had a likely odds of 0.10 to be on the boards, compared to males. For every one female getting onto boards, 9 would be unable to. Females with advanced degrees were 7x likely to be on boards than female and male counterparts. The odds of a board seat is significantly likely for individuals in some industries compared to a referent industry (government). At the firm level, controlling other variables in the model, as the size of boards are increased by a unit, the odds of having a woman on board increase 1.3 times. This implies that the likelihood of having a woman board of director rises if the size of boards is raised by a third. Corroboration from text mining technique applied to survey responses showed strong correlation across academic degrees (both bachelor's and advanced), industry, and job title; pointing that having more women in C-roles increase the odds of increasing their numbers on corporate boards. Gender diversity on boards have been studied largely from the developed economy lens and/or international comparisons. These quantitative explorations showed pathways that can advance not only understanding and support for extant theories (human capital, resource dependence), but also point to further work (institutional, industry) that can provide levers for policy and advocacy, for countries with similar challenges.
format text
author Bautista, Maria C G
De Leon, Marlene
Nano, Rudyard Jose R, IV
author_facet Bautista, Maria C G
De Leon, Marlene
Nano, Rudyard Jose R, IV
author_sort Bautista, Maria C G
title Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
title_short Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
title_full Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
title_fullStr Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
title_full_unstemmed Women on Boards of Philippine Corporations: Quantitative Explorations
title_sort women on boards of philippine corporations: quantitative explorations
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2020
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/gsb-pubs/55
https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1054&context=gsb-pubs
_version_ 1736864374452125696