Mail Online

How WFH damages women’s careers

Return to office or lose out to men, Aviva boss warns

By Lucy White

WOMEN’S careers could be damaged if they continue to work from home, the boss of one of the City’s biggest institutions has warned.

As increasing numbers return to the office following the end of Covid restrictions, Aviva chief executive Amanda Blanc (pictured) said working mothers who take on the brunt of childcare duties could miss out if they are at their desks less often than their male peers.

Calling for an end to the ‘hokey-cokey’ in-out working-from-home guidance, the mother-of-two said: ‘If what you see is that all the men come back to the office and the women don’t, then obviously the women are not going to be around when some of the conversations are being had and they’re going to miss out on opportunities.

‘So that’s what I’m calling out – I don’t want that to happen. We know that the progression of women in financial services is simply not good enough – women are not moving into more senior roles quickly enough.

‘We just need to make sure that, in the way that we work, we don’t jeopardise women’s opportunities.’

The comments came as millions of workers return to the office following the lifting of Covid restrictions.

Several leading City institutions are hauling their staff back in.

A briefing note from one team at investment bank JPMorgan, seen by the Mail, said staff must be in the office for three days, including a Monday or Friday. This would stop many workers being at their desks on their preferred days of just Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Goldman Sachs has also asked its 6,500 London staff to head back in, and rival Citigroup is expecting staff to be in ‘at least three days a week’.

Blanc said her staff were expected to be in the office three days a week.

She told the BBC: ‘I’m really keen that we do have some physical presence in the office, even though I think the way we work in the office will be different to how it was pre-Covid.’

Sir Iain Duncan Smith, former leader of the Tory party, said: ‘There’s a whole ecosystem in Britain’s town and city centres that depends on people working in them. If people don’t come in for work, it won’t be there for their social activities. There are a lot of people who depend on jobs in bars, restaurants, shops. If workers don’t go back into their offices, this ecosystem won’t survive.’ Many firms are cautiously easing their office workers back into their commute, pushing staff to be in just three days a week.

Blanc has previously spoken about a ‘motherhood penalty’, which many women face in their career after returning from maternity leave.

CITY & FINANCE

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2022-01-29T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-29T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://mailonline.pressreader.com/article/282686165616457

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