Bank of America: Greater Disclosure of Material Corporate Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Data

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BE IT RESOLVED: Shareholders request that Bank of America Corp. (“Bank of America”) report to shareholders on the effectiveness of the Company's diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. The report should be done at reasonable expense, exclude proprietary information, and provide transparency on outcomes, using quantitative metrics, for hiring, retention, and promotion of employees, including data by gender, race, and ethnicity.

SUPPORTING STATEMENT: Quantitative data is sought so that investors can assess and compare the effectiveness of the Company’s diversity, equity, and inclusion programs.

WHEREAS: Bank of America provides limited data on the effectiveness of its diversity and inclusion programs.

Numerous studies have pointed to the benefits of a diverse workforce. Their findings include:

  • Companies with the strongest executive ethnic diversity were 33 percent more likely to have financial returns above their industry medians than those in the bottom quartile for executive ethnic diversity. [1]

  • Companies in the top quartile for gender diversity are 21 percent more likely to outperform on profitability.[2]

  • The 20 most diverse companies had an average annual five year stock return that was 5.8 percentage points higher than the 20 least diverse companies.[3]

Similar to how an income statement pairs with a balance sheet, hiring, promotion and retention rate data show how well a company manages its workforce diversity. Without this data, investors are unable to assess a company’s human capital management program.

Companies should look to hire the best talent. However, Black and Latino applicants face hiring challenges. Results of a meta-analysis of 24 field experiments found that, with identical resumes, white applicants received an average of 36 percent more callbacks than Black applicants and 24 percent more callbacks than Latino applicants.[4]

Promotion rates show how well diverse talent is nurtured at a company. Unfortunately, women and employees of color experience “a broken rung” in their careers; for every 100 men who are promoted, only 86 women are. Women of color are particularly impacted, comprising 17 percent of the entry-level workforce and only four percent of executives.[5]

Retention rates show whether employees choose to remain at a company. Morgan Stanley has found that employee retention above industry average can indicate a competitive advantage and higher levels of future profitability.[6] Companies with high employee satisfaction have also been linked to annualized outperformance of over two percent.[7]

Between September 2020 and September 2022, S&P 100 companies increased their release of hiring rate data by gender, race and ethnicity by 298 percent; retention rate data by 481 percent; and promotion rate data by 300 percent.[8] Companies that release, or have committed to release, more inclusion data than Bank of America include AIG, American Express, Allstate, Nasdaq, and BlackRock.

Bank of America has not shared sufficient hiring, retention, and promotion data to allow investors to determine the effectiveness of its human capital management programs.


Resolution Details

Company: 
Bank of America

Lead Filer: 
Myra K. Young and James McRitchie

Year: 2023

Filing Date: 
November 2022

Initiative(s): Resolution Withdrawn, Agreement Reached

Status: Filed

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