FEATURES
DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION
Doubling down on D&I As the insurance industry wakes up to the need to make real progress on diversity and inclusion, Insurance Business examines how eight companies are tackling this challenge FOR MANY YEARS, insurance workplaces have failed to reflect the reality of the world outside them. Insurance professionals would step onto the street at midday to be surrounded by a rich diversity of individuals and select lunch from any number of international cuisines, only to return to an office that was largely white, mono-cultural and male. But this is slowly changing. Take gender diversity, where things are starting to shift
globally. According to Swiss Re, the number of women at the C-suite level in insurance is up from 10% in 2010 to 17% in 2019. Leading Australian insurers are increasingly placing diversity – in all its forms – front and centre of their business strategies. Many are keen participants in the annual Dive In Festival, an invaluable industry forum for building a more diverse and inclusive future. Several organisations are also launching Reconciliation Action
Plans to support the national reconciliation movement with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It’s no wonder insurance is getting serious about D&I. Research suggests that having a strong D&I program isn’t just the right thing to do; it’s also good for business. In its latest study of more than 1,000 large companies, McKinsey found that those with executive teams in the top quartile for ethnic and racial diversity were 36% more likely to have above-average financial returns, while those in the top quartile for gender diversity were 30% more likely to have above-average returns. As for cultural diversity, it simply makes sense in a country where, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, nearly 49% of Australians were born overseas, over 300 languages are spoken at home and more than 300 ancestries are identified with. As a country, Australia is all the richer for this multitude of outlooks, identities, religions, ethnicities, cultures, backgrounds and experiences. And as an industry, insurance is increasingly tapping into this diversity and all the benefits it brings.
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