Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

More women join UAE boards, but progress ‘still slow’

Businesses will benefit 'when their female directors have the numbers to build influence,' says Maliha Jilani Dubai Tourism
Businesses will benefit 'when their female directors have the numbers to build influence,' says Maliha Jilani
  • Women 23% of 2022 board hires
  • But still only 8.9% of total
  • Campaigners warn of ‘tokenism’

When Maha Abdul Majeed Ismail Ali Al Fahim joined the board of Islamic Arab Insurance Company this year, she became part of a growing trend.

Women made up 23 percent of appointments to UAE boards in 2022, from just 12 percent in 2020, according to executive search company Heidrick & Struggles. But campaigners in the Gulf have warned that progress on boardroom diversity remains slow and some female appointments feel like “tokenism”. 

Heidrick & Struggles’ Board Monitor also reported that 59 percent of Dubai and Abu Dhabi-listed companies had at least one woman on the board, but women hold only 8.9 percent of total board seats.

The UAE’s quota of one woman per listed company board, introduced by the Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority in 2021, is driving efforts on diversity, the report said, but some companies are going further.

Maliha Jilani, partner in Heidrick & Struggles’ Dubai office and social impact practice lead for the Middle East and North Africa, told AGBI this was having a positive impact on results.  

“Companies incorporating inclusion into their strategies typically observe a stronger link to business results. The bottom line is that a strong leadership bench is key to driving a company’s success and building resiliency,” she said.

The report added, however, that “while having a lone woman on each board is a good start, boards will see more benefits of gender diversity when their female directors have the numbers to build influence and have an impact.”

Emma Burdett, founder of the GCC networking group Women in Leadership Deliver (Wild), also believes the region has a long way to go on the issue.

“The few women who are on boards tend to be the only female, which gives a feeling of tokenism and is just added to the mix for the sake of it,” Burdett said. 

Wild is working with the United Nations in Riyadh on a programme to get more women into leadership roles in Saudi Arabia, training businesses as well as young executives.

“The current pace of change for female leadership is still slow. Whilst we see tremendous efforts from our governments to implement policies surrounding equality, companies have a long way to go,” she added.

The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants in the Middle East said it had also observed “positive changes” with women advancing into senior and leadership roles, but added that the gender gap “remains substantial”.

Heidrick & Struggles’ research identified a “concerted effort” to appoint more female first-time board members. In all, 43 percent of the women appointed had previous public board experience, compared to 67 percent of the men.

New board members in the UAE were also among the youngest globally. The average age of the 2022 cohort was 48, down from nearly 50 the previous year and over 52 in 2020. 

The next youngest were found in Poland and Saudi Arabia, where the average age of appointees was 50. The oldest were in the United States and Canada, with an average age of 59.

Latest articles

An extension of Diriyah's Bujairi Terrace, a popular nightspot, will open in November

Diriyah giga-project to open first hotel in November

Diriyah, one of Saudi Arabia’s leading giga-projects, will finally open its first hotel in November along with other attractions and sites, its CEO said this week.  “This November we’ll open another few kilometres of parks, we’ll open our first Bab Samhan hotel, we’ll open our first museum which is the Diriyah Art Futures Museum, we’ll […]

King Abdulaziz International Airport: the number of international flights increased but there were less than 27.4 million international visitors to the kingdom last year

Passenger numbers rise 26% in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia said this week that its total number of air passengers rose 26 percent to 112 million in 2023. This includes a 46 percent rise in the total number of international travellers to 61 million.  The number means the kingdom’s airports are approaching full capacity, which is 116 million passengers a year, including 45 […]

Oil workers in Venezuela, a founder member of Opec. The IEA predicts slower demand growth

IEA and Opec move further apart on global oil demand

The division between the International Energy Agency and oil producers’ group Opec has deepened as the Paris-based energy watchdog once again curtailed its oil demand outlook for 2024, amid softer macro sentiment. In its monthly report, the IEA forecast on Wednesday that world fuel demand will grow by 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) this […]

Tourists visit the tombs of the Nabatean civilisation in AlUla. Saudi Arabia's goal is for tourism to make up 10 percent of GDP by 2030

Affluent tourists around the globe on Saudi Arabia’s radar

Saudi Arabia will invest more than $800 billion in its main giga-projects by the next decade as part of a tourism expansion strategy focused on affluent tourists in China, India and Europe.  The kingdom’s tourism minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb, speaking at the Qatar Investment Forum, said: “We’re building and investing in major destinations like Neom, Red […]