Sometimes, progress is measured by half-court movements.
When I was in school, girls played basketball by different rules than
the boys. We played on a half-court, and could only dribble three times
before passing the ball. Girls were regarded as too fragile to run the
distance. Now, try telling that to the women in the WNBA.
It’s good to measure positive change, like women’s full court
professional basketball. Recognizing these changes is what we celebrate
in March as Women’s History Month. But I’m done with simply celebrating
where we’ve been. Instead, it’s time to look at March as more a
celebration of our future — let’s call it “Women Making History Month.”
Old stereotypes still stand in our way. Even today, only two-thirds of
adults in this country think a woman could be president, according to a
CNN/Opinion Research survey. Meanwhile, state legislatures — the farm
teams for future leaders — have only one-quarter representation by
women, a pitiful ratio that has remained unchanged for a decade. The
U.S. ranks 69th in the world for women’s legislative representation,
with only 16 percent women in Congress.
We’re missing a lot, and it doesn’t have to be this way. The leaders of
some countries have realized that it really does matter who makes the
decisions. They see what our leaders have not yet recognized: Having
more women at the top is good business and smart politics.
For example, in Norway, women make up 36 percent of the members on
corporate boards, while in the U.S., progress seems stalled at not
quite 15 percent. How did they do it in Norway? In 2003, Norway passed
a tough law that requires all public companies to ensure that their
boards are 40 percent women. By 2007, 85 percent of their public
companies met the mark.
Smart leaders in Norway and other countries that focus on tapping the
talents of women realize that at least half of the talent base of the
future is made up of women. In an increasingly competitive world, no
business or nation that fails to tap that talent is likely to succeed.
We need to play catch-up and focus on women’s advancement as a key part
of our competitiveness. The World Economic Forum ranks women’s
advancement by country; the U.S. has now fallen to 31st.
What an irony, then, that in the U.S., the talent pipeline is filled
with women. By 2010, women are expected to hold 60 percent of the
nation’s wealth. Since 1996, a higher proportion of women than men have
graduated from college, and the trend line is only expected to
accelerate. But we’ll continue to waste a lot of that talent unless we
transform our outmoded model of “only men need apply” leadership.
One way to tap our wellspring of female talent is to have a critical
mass of women in decision-making positions. They bring new ideas and
networks to reach the new talent; that offers the promise of no more
excuses about a lack of “qualified women.” When women decision-makers
join the ranks of men in similar positions, the bottom line improves
for shareholders and stakeholders.
More women at the table and in the corner offices helps to shape the
future; a modernized policy agenda emerges to address lagging issues
like the wage gap and supports for working families. One major payoff
to society is the stronger families that result from a cultural shift
to a definition of personal success that encompasses earning, caring
and caretaking. Ultimately, more women joining the ranks of
decision-makers will make us more competitive as we leave the past
behind and utilize the creativity, energy and skill of more of our
citizens.
How do we move into a better future? Decision-makers must ensure that
there are women in every pool of candidates for every position, from
supervisor to CEO. Political parties and public officials must develop
goals and timetables to get more women into political office; 101 other
countries in the world already do it. Women who have made it need to
unapologetically wedge the door open for other qualified women,
particularly younger ones.
This March, it is not enough to look backwards. Women in the United
States have plenty more to accomplish; we plan to make history, in the
best sense of that phrase. But the mindset that “American women are
doing fine, thank you” clouds the reality that we need more women at
the top to make the tough calls.
Playing by different rules that undervalue women’s contributions has no place in basketball, business or politics.
Women’s future and the country’s future are the same. Let’s celebrate that — and go make some history.
Linda
Tarr-Whelan is a senior fellow at Demos, a New York-based independent
think tank, and a former ambassador to the U.N. Commission on the
Status of Women.