Department of Economics and Business Economics

Valdemar Smith

Why are so few females promoted into CEO and vice-president positions? Danish empiral evidence 1997-2007

Research output: Working paper/Preprint Working paperResearch

In most OECD countries, only very few women succeed in reaching top executive positions. In this paper, the probability of promotion into VP and CEO positions is estimated based on employer-employee data on all Danish companies observed during the period 1997-2007. After controlling for a large number of family-related variables, including take-up history of maternity and paternity leave and proxies for 'female-friendly' companies, there is still a considerable gap in the promotion probabilities for CEO positions, but not for VP positions. Thus, the results cannot confirm recent theories on 'belief flipping' or disappearance of statistical discrimination against women who succeed getting into career track positions. The results reflect that the hiring decision and the decision to enter a top position as 'number one,' i.e. CEO, in the organization is very different from the decision to hire or become VP, i.e. 'number two' or lower.
Original languageEnglish
Place of publicationBonn
PublisherIZA. Institute for the Study of Labor / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit
Number of pages48
Publication statusPublished - 2011

    Research areas

  • promotion, top executive positions, statistical discrimination

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