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Majority of FTSE 100 firms reach boardroom diversity targets

But the Government-commissioned report also revealed most companies are still yet to have diversity in their executive roles

The majority of FTSE 100 companies have met targets set my the government to increase diversity at board level(Image: RODNAE Productions from Pexels)

Nearly all FTSE 100 boards have met ethnic diversity targets set by the Government's Parker Review, but progress is still slow at executive level.

A report by Sir John Parker, who was appointed by the Government in 2015 to boost ethnic diversity in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ boardrooms, found 89 of the FTSE 100 Index firms had minority ethnic members on their boards in time for the end-of-year target.

It said another five appointments had been announced by top-tier firms since the year-end, with a further three in the advanced recruitment process, leaving just three firms to signal their commitment.

In 2017, Sir John set a goal for all FTSE 100 boards to have at least one director from a minority ethnic background by December 2021. A similar target was set for FTSE 250 boards, with a deadline of 2024.

Just over half – 128 – of FTSE 250 firms had at least one director from a minority ethnic background at the end of 2021.

The latest figures mark a significant improvement since the review was launched, with just half of boards having ethnic minority representation in 2015.

Now, around 16% of all FTSE 100 board roles – 164 out of 1,056 – are held by minority ethnic directors.

Sir John hailed an “extraordinary sea change” within listed firms on diversity and inclusion.