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Merkel rules out quota for women execs

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Merkel rules out quota for women execs
Photo: DPA

Chancellor Angela Merkel ruled out a mandatory quota for women in executive positions at German firms late on Wednesday, effectively ending an internal debate within her party on the subject.

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Through her spokesman Steffen Seibert, Merkel said there would be “no legally obligatory quota,” because such a regulation was unenforceable. However she put the business community on notice that it must work harder to raise the number of women in top jobs.

A recent survey by the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW), found that just 2.2 percent of leadership positions at Germany's top 100 companies are women - only 11 out of 490.

Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party had been locked in a debate on the matter this week after Labour Minister Ursula von der Leyen and Family and Social Affairs Minister Kristina Schröder locked horns publicly on the issue of a mandatory quota.

Von der Leyen favours a mandatory quota of 30 percent women on company boards and in executive positions. Schröder said she was also in favour of a quota but insisted it must be voluntary.

The CDU’s coalition partners, their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union and the pro-business Free Democratic Party, both opposed mandatory quotas.

German businesses agreed 10 years ago to voluntarily increase the number of women in executive positions. The success had been “modest, to put it mildly,” Seibert said, acknowledging progress had been “disappointing.”

“Germany needs significantly more women in leadership positions,” he said.

There was agreement on that within the centre-right coalition, though there were “different opinions” about how to achieve it.

Merkel wants to give business a second chance to work towards raising the number of women in executive jobs without forcing them through regulation.

However, there would have to be progress within a “manageable time frame,” Seibert said.

Results must not be postponed “indefinitely” and the government would not sit back while the business community took another 10 years, he said.

DAPD/djw

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