United Parcel Service Inc: Greater Disclosure of Material Corporate Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Data

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WHEREAS: Numerous studies by respected organizations such as The Wall Street Journal, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, McKinsey, and BCG have pointed to the material benefits of a diverse workforce.

Companies should look to hire the best talent. However, Black and Latino applicants face recruitment challenges. Results of a meta-analysis study of 24 field experiments, dating back to 1990, found that, with identical resumes, White applicants receive an average of 36 percent more callbacks than Black applicants and 24 percent more callbacks than Latino applicants.”

Promotion rates show how well diverse talent is nurtured at a company. Women and non-White employees experience “a broken rung” in their careers. For every 100 men who are promoted, only 86 women are promoted. Non-White women are particularly impacted, comprising 17 percent of the entry-level workforce and only 4 percent of executives. Employees with the potential for advancement have a higher retention rate.

Morgan Stanley has found that: “Employee retention that is above industry peer averages can indicate the presence of competitive advantage. This advantage may lead to higher levels of future profitability than past financial performance would indicate.” Companies with high employee satisfaction have also been linked to annualized outperformance of over two percent.

The United Parcel Service Inc. (“UPS”) Board has stated, “UPS views diversity, equity, and inclusion as a strategic imperative that enables the company to attract and retain talented employees, foster innovation to enhance customer service, and bring strength and stability to businesses and communities.”

However, UPS has released only retention and recruitment rates by gender. It has not shared sufficient recruitment, retention, or promotion data by race and ethnicity to allow investors to determine the effectiveness of its human capital management programs.

Between September 2020 and September 2021, the number of S&P 100 companies releasing recruitment rate data by gender, race and ethnicity increased by 234 percent, companies releasing retention rate data increased by 79 percent, and companies releasing promotion rate data increased by 379 percent.

Alaska Air Group, Boeing, Norfolk Southern Corp., and Uber all release more inclusion-focused data than UPS does. UPS is increasingly a laggard in its decision to continue to withhold these data sets. UPS' Investors may wish to be particularly vigilant in their assessment of diversity programs at UPS, as the company has faced a number of allegations of discrimination on the basis of race and religion.

BE IT RESOLVED: Shareholders request that UPS report to shareholders on the effectiveness of the Company's diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. The reporting should be done at reasonable expense, exclude proprietary information, and address outcomes using quantitative metrics for recruitment, retention, and promotion of employees, including data by gender, race, and ethnicity.

SUPPORTING STATEMENT: Quantitative data is sought so that investors can assess, understand, and compare the effectiveness of companies’ diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and apply this analysis to investors’ portfolio management and securities’ selection process.

Resolution Details

Company: 
United Parcel Service Inc

Lead Filer: 
As You Sow

Year: 2022

Filing Date: 
November 2021

Initiative(s): Diversity Data Disclosure

Status: 36.8% Vote

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