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  1. Swiss parliament approves "gender quotas" for big business' boards

    Source: Xinhua    2018-06-17 18:48:35

    GENEVA, June 17 (Xinhua) -- The Swiss parliament has voted for gender quotas in the boardrooms of large publicly-traded companies.

    The vote in the House of Representatives, led by Justice Minister Simonetta Sommaruga, was tense and tight, reported the Swiss News Agency, SDA-ATS, with the result swung by a single vote (95 for, 94 against, with three abstentions).

    The companies concerned have between five and ten years to make the changes.

    However, the result may be more symbolic than concrete as no sanctions are attached to non-adherence, rather an order to "explain" any failure to comply.

    But, the mere mention of the word "quota" represents a leap forward, Sommaruga told Swiss public broadcaster, RTS.

    The conservative-right Swiss People's Party opposed the proposal and said it would vote against the entire package of business reform legislation within which the quotas are contained.

    The center-right Radical-Liberal party was also against the proposal, mainly for reasons of free-market integrity and the "insult" implied by "reducing woman to quotas" in the words of one of its members.

    The decision will affect the largest publicly-traded companies in the country, potentially some 250 businesses.

    They must ensure that 30 percent of the Board of Directors in the next five years and 20 percent of the Executive Board is female over the next ten years.

    Currently, said Sommaruga, the corresponding figures are stuck at 10 percent and 20 percent.

    Editor: Liangyu
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    Xinhuanet

    Swiss parliament approves "gender quotas" for big business' boards

    Source: Xinhua 2018-06-17 18:48:35

    GENEVA, June 17 (Xinhua) -- The Swiss parliament has voted for gender quotas in the boardrooms of large publicly-traded companies.

    The vote in the House of Representatives, led by Justice Minister Simonetta Sommaruga, was tense and tight, reported the Swiss News Agency, SDA-ATS, with the result swung by a single vote (95 for, 94 against, with three abstentions).

    The companies concerned have between five and ten years to make the changes.

    However, the result may be more symbolic than concrete as no sanctions are attached to non-adherence, rather an order to "explain" any failure to comply.

    But, the mere mention of the word "quota" represents a leap forward, Sommaruga told Swiss public broadcaster, RTS.

    The conservative-right Swiss People's Party opposed the proposal and said it would vote against the entire package of business reform legislation within which the quotas are contained.

    The center-right Radical-Liberal party was also against the proposal, mainly for reasons of free-market integrity and the "insult" implied by "reducing woman to quotas" in the words of one of its members.

    The decision will affect the largest publicly-traded companies in the country, potentially some 250 businesses.

    They must ensure that 30 percent of the Board of Directors in the next five years and 20 percent of the Executive Board is female over the next ten years.

    Currently, said Sommaruga, the corresponding figures are stuck at 10 percent and 20 percent.

    [Editor: huaxia]
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