Top Financial Services Democrats Request Updated GAO Diversity Study
Concerns Remain Over Slow Progress in Increasing Diversity in Financial Services Industry
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Leading Democrats today requested that the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) update an April 2013 study on diversity in the financial services industry and agencies.
In a letter to GAO, House Financial Services Committee Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D-CA), Senate Banking Committee Ranking Member Sherrod Brown (D-OH), and House Financial Services Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee Ranking Member Al Green (D-TX) expressed their concern that the financial services industry has been slow to increase diversity in the workplace, particularly in management positions.
“We believe that improving the racial, ethnic, and gender workforce diversity within this industry will help it better understand the needs of the communities that it serves and, as such, consider diversity as critically important for ensuring that all consumers are treated fairly,” the Members wrote.
GAO’s most recent study found that management-level representation of minorities and women in the financial services industry and among federal financial agencies had not changed substantially in the years following the financial crisis. The House Financial Services Committee Democratic staff identified a similar trend in a November 2015 report looking into the federal financial agencies.
“For this reason, an update on trends in the financial services industry will also help to inform our oversight of this important statutory requirement,” the letter states. “Specifically, we are interested in an updated analysis of the workforce diversity in the financial services industry and whether the industry has made any progress in increasing the number of racial and ethnic minorities and women hired to, and serving in, management positions. We are also interested in updated information on policies, practices, and programs that firms are using to promote better workforce diversity, including internships, outreach initiatives, internal and external mentoring programs, and other efforts; whether firms have expanded or reduced these efforts; and how firms are assessing the effectiveness of these efforts.”
The full text of the letter is below.
The Honorable Gene Dodaro
Comptroller General
U.S. Government Accountability Office
441 G Street, NW
Washington, DC 20548
Dear Mr. Dodaro:
We write to request that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) update its April 2013 study, “Diversity Management: Trends and Practices in the Financial Services Industry and Agencies after the Recent Financial Crisis” (GAO-13-238). We remain concerned about the findings in the 2013 study of continued slow progress with respect to increasing the representation of racial and ethnic minorities and women within the financial services industry, particularly in management positions. We believe that improving the racial, ethnic, and gender workforce diversity within this industry will help it better understand the needs of the communities that it serves and, as such, consider diversity as critically important for ensuring that all consumers are treated fairly.
In November 2015, the House Financial Services Committee Democratic staff issued a report, “The Dodd-Frank Act Five Years Later: Diversity in the Financial Services Agencies,” that also showed an underrepresentation of racial and ethnic minorities and women within the federal agencies responsible for overseeing the financial services industry, especially in senior-management positions. As you know, the Dodd-Frank Act includes a provision creating Offices of Minority and Women Inclusion within these agencies that are tasked with assessing the diversity policies and practices of entities they regulate. For this reason, an update on trends in the financial services industry will also help to inform our oversight of this important statutory requirement.
Specifically, we are interested in an updated analysis of the workforce diversity in the financial services industry and whether the industry has made any progress in increasing the number of racial and ethnic minorities and women hired to, and serving in, management positions. We are also interested in updated information on policies, practices, and programs that firms are using to promote better workforce diversity, including internships, outreach initiatives, internal and external mentoring programs, and other efforts; whether firms have expanded or reduced these efforts; and how firms are assessing the effectiveness of these efforts.
We look forward to working with you on this very important issue.
Sincerely,
Rep. Maxine Waters, Ranking Member, House Committee on Financial Services
Sen. Sherrod Brown, Ranking Member, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Rep. Al Green, Ranking Member, House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
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