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Enterprise

Number of FTSE 100 female directors on the rise but more work to do, concludes report

The final report from the Hampton-Alexander Review has revealed significant improvements in gender balance on the boards of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's biggest companies.

The number of women in the top roles at FTSE board level has increased but more needs to be done

The number of women on FTSE boards has surged by 50% in five years, but “significant progress” is needed to boost the number of female top bosses in Britain’s biggest firms, according to a report.

The revealed that the number of women on FTSE boards has jumped to 1,026 – up from 682 in 2015.

It means that 34.3% of FTSE 350 board roles are now held by women, up from 21.9% in October 2015 – hitting the review’s target for at least a third.

There are also no all-male boards, against 15 in 2015, in another milestone for the review, which was launched in 2016 with the aim of increasing female representation at the top of business.

But the review’s chair Sir Philip Hampton called for further progress on increasing the number of women in top executive roles, with men still firmly dominating the ranks.

Sir Philip said: “There’s been excellent progress for women leaders in business over the last 10 years or more, with boards and shareholders determined to see change.

“The progress has been strongest with non-executive positions on boards, but the coming years should see many more women taking top executive roles.

“That’s what is needed to sustain the changes made.”