Committee will take progress on diversity into account at next appointment to Bank's Policy Committees
29 June 2018
The Treasury Committee has published its reports on the appointment of Professor Jonathan Haskel to the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and Bradley Fried to the Chair of the Court of the Bank of England.
- Read the report: Appointment of Professor Jonathan Haskel to the Monetary Policy Committee
- Read the report: Appointment of Bradley Fried as Chair of Court, Bank of England
- Letter to Sir Tom Scholar, regarding diversity in public appointments, 28 2018
- Letter to Dr Mark Carney, regarding diversity in public appointments, 28 2018
The Committee has agreed that both of these appointments meet its requirements of personal independence and professional competence. However, the Committee's concerns about the lack of diversity at the senior levels of the Bank of England persist.
Rt Hon. Nicky Morgan MP, Chair of the Treasury Committee, has written to Sir Tom Scholar, Permanent Secretary of HM Treasury, requesting the Treasury's strategy and action plan for how it intends to address diversity in public appointments.
Mrs Morgan also said that the Committee is prepared to take progress on this matter into account at the next appointment made to any of the Bank of England's Policy Committees (the MPC, the Financial Policy Committee or the Prudential Regulation Committee).
Mrs Morgan has also written to Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, to request the Bank's diversity strategy and an action plan for how it intends to address diversity in its senior management team.
Chair's comments
Commenting on the correspondence, Mrs Morgan said:
"Whilst the Committee has approved the appointments of Professor Haskel and Mr Fried, it's disappointing that the gender balance at the most senior levels of the Bank of England will not be improved.
The Committee raised concerns about the Bank's gender diversity following the appointment of Sir Dave Ramsden and Professor Silvana Tenreyro in October 2017. Since October, only three out of 10 public appointments and reappointments to the Bank's committees have been women.
With the Bank's female representation in senior management roles at the Bank decreasing to 29 per cent last year, it seems increasingly unlikely that the Bank will meet its own diversity strategy to have 35 per cent female participation in senior management positions by 2020.
As we concluded in our Women in Finance Report, recruitment practices and workplace culture are often barriers to women progressing to the most senior levels. The Bank and the Treasury must explain how they will address such barriers to improve the diversity in public appointments.
As the Committee raised with the Economic Secretary to the Treasury on Wednesday, the Treasury Committee is prepared to take progress on this matter into account in the next appointment made to any of the Bank of England's Policy Committee."
Further information
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