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Goldman Sachs Lags Behind National Averages for Female Leadership

Women make up 21% of U.S. executives or senior officials at the bank, while women constitute 29% of senior officials in finance nationwide.

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Around 21% of U.S. executives or senior officials at Goldman Sachs Group are women, according to statistics published Thursday as part of the bank’s annual Environmental, Social and Governance Report.

That percentage is below the 29% national average of senior officials in U.S. finance and insurance who are women, according to the most recent data from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Women made up 48% of midlevel officials and managers in the United States within finance and insurance, compared with 26% at Goldman.

Asked to comment on the 21% figure, a Goldman spokesman said: “Goldman Sachs is committed to fostering a work environment that values diverse backgrounds and perspectives.”

Around 37% of total U.S. employees at Goldman (GS) are women, the report said.

In 2015, Goldman said a quarter of its new managing directors that year were women, the highest percentage in the bank’s history.

The bank has several efforts in place to retain female employees, including a program that helps those who have left the workforce for two or more years to restart their careers and a six-month initiative aimed at developing third- and second-year associates.