Financial Services

A Question of Gender

April 10, 2007

Global

April 10, 2007

Global
Monica Woodley

Editorial director, EMEA

Monica is editorial director for The Economist Intelligence Unit's thought leadership division in EMEA. As such, she manages a team of editors across the region who produce bespoke research programmes for a range of clients. In her five years with the Economist Group, she personally has managed research programmes for companies such as Barclays, BlackRock, State Street, BNY Mellon, Goldman Sachs, Mastercard, EY, Deloitte and PwC, on topics ranging from the impact of financial regulation, to the development of innovation ecosystems, to how consumer demand is driving retail innovation.

Monica regularly chairs and presents at Economist conferences, such as Bellwether Europe, the Insurance Summit and the Future of Banking, as well as third-party events such as the Globes Israel Business Conference, the UN Annual Forum on Business and Human Rights and the Geneva Association General Assembly. Prior to joining The Economist Group, Monica was a financial journalist specialising in wealth and asset management at the Financial Times, Euromoney and Incisive Media. She has a master’s degree in politics from Georgetown University and holds the Certificate of Financial Planning.

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A Question of Gender is a Barclays Wealth report written in cooperation with the Economist Intelligence Unit.

Affluence of women is increasing

‘Women’ and ‘wealth’ are two words being heard together more frequently, and the commercial world is sitting up and taking notice of women’s growing spending power. Globally women are becoming an economic force with which to be reckoned.

The ‘Glass Ceiling’ persists

While the US and UK lead on the number of management positions held by women, the ‘glass ceiling’ persists and an equal number of women to men on company boards and in government is predicted to still be some way off.

Business as a driver of wealth

The perception of wealth gained via inheritance or marriage is becoming outdated, but as women become more independent and increasingly common in the world of business, what price does their success have on family and lifestyle?

Education is the cornerstone

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