
Amy Rosen reporting in with more from Davos and the World Economic Forum. Check back with us for more from Amy.
Sitting here in a country that did not give women the right to vote until 1971 and where today 4 of the 7 member governing body are woman, I am struck by the uneven progress and persistent barriers that woman face in specific fields. The International Herald Tribune led with a story today about the wide gender gap at top of the ladder in Europe. On that note I headed into this morning’s WEF session titled, Six Global Challenges, One Solution: Women.
Some of the true leaders pushing gender equity as an issue affecting all aspects of our world were with us. President Michelle Bachelet, who having finished transforming Chile, has now taken the helm of a new effort called UN Women, provided informed insight into the realities of gender inequity. Laura Tyson, long a leader in economic policy for the US, provided guidance to keep the conversation on track. Laura Liswood, from the Council of Women World Leaders and senior advisor to Goldman Sachs, Beth Brooke of Ernst & Young, Tae Yoo of Cisco were among the impressive women in the room who have been at the table for years, fighting for political capital around these issues in very meaningful ways. All of them offered provocative comments which will continue to resonate with me for some time to come. There were even some men in the room (of course not enough) who contributed meaningful ideas and solutions. In general, I was struck by how strong a case that the data makes for changing the equation for girls and women.
The discussion however was focused around global challenges including, education, aging population, conflict resolution, population growth, employment and health. I was surprised that the biggest global challenge – rebuilding a robust economy – was not being addressed. This thought led me to reflect on the four amazing young women who won the top prizes at the OppenheimerFunds/NFTE National Youth Entrepreneurship Challenge [1]. Al most 15,000 high school students coming from economically challenging circumstances in the US have the opportunity to compete in the challenge. This was the first time in the five years of the Challenge that all the finalists were young women, but over the years the top prizes had gone to girls almost 60% of the time. I find this particularly heartening considering the still skewed representation of women in the highest ranks of corporate leadership. In fact just 14.4% of executive officer positions in Fortune 500 companies are occupied by women today. But more importantly, it is a sign to me that young women will be leading our economic recovery as the entrepreneurs creating the jobs and the robust economy of the near future.
But, we will only get there with a major commitment to teach the skills at the core of entrepreneurship – opportunity recognition, creative thinking and problem solving among them. Entrepreneurship should be a required course in every school around the world, alongside traditional subjects such as math, science and language. In the US, we need to do a better job of preparing all our children, including our young women, to compete in a global economy – our education system is failing, and it’s failing miserably in low-income communities. Entrepreneurship teaches young people who didn’t think they had many options for their futures that they do in fact have a lot of options – completing high school, going to college, launching a business or getting a stable job being among those choices.<