Team Scotland, Research David Hume Institute Team Scotland, Research David Hume Institute

Blog: To field our best team we need a more diverse squad

As the football transfer deadline day passed last week, many teams made key appointments to their squads. Player’s data and match statistics underpinned transfer decisions. It’s no different in business: data matters and should affect the choices being made.

Susan Murray’s latest blog.

Blog by Susan Murray, the David Hume Institute

6th September 2021

Image of close-up of a white line on green grass in a soccer field.

Image credit: Photo by Sandro Schuh free from Unsplash 06.09.2021.

As the football transfer deadline day passed last week, many teams made key appointments to their squads. Player’s data and match statistics underpinned transfer decisions. It’s no different in business: data matters and should affect the choices being made. 

However, new data from the David Hume Institute shows that business leaders are limiting Scotland’s potential by not prioritising diversity in their top decision makers.  Diversity of thought increases resilience, productivity and innovation as well as improving risk management.  Scotland’s top team is missing out.

The research investigated investment and angel investment leaders in Scotland.  Scotland’s investment companies have less diversity at the top than companies elsewhere in the UK. Although angel investment leaders are more diverse than the bigger companies.

The data on who is, and isn’t securing business investment and who can access the resources to grow is shocking - and again, limiting potential.

The data shows those with resources and connections are more able to reach the top.  This limits the pool of top decision makers and risks group-think - a risk Scotland should be aware of after the last financial crisis.

Business and investment leaders lag behind other sectors, and are not responding to the data linking diversity of thought with successful outcomes.  

So why isn’t change happening faster? 

Studies from around the world show overt and covert bias is limiting the pool - so this is a great opportunity.  Awareness is the first step - just like players on a football pitch, knowing your own statistics helps improvement.  Leaders have the power to champion and deliver change in Scotland.

Three out of ten of the top 50 business leaders also hold positions on other boards, meaning they can influence change beyond their own companies.  Similarly, the power to decide who gets investment is in the hands of the investment leaders.

Why does this matter? Improving gender diversity alone could add up to £250 billion of new value to the UK economy, if women’s new businesses were invested in and scaled up at the same rate as men’s. If women’s participation rates matched men’s there would be the potential of c.35,000 more direct jobs in the Scottish economy.

The leaders have the power to bring change. The country has big challenges ahead and leaders need to rise to those challenges.  Scotland needs its top team on the pitch.

The IOD conference last week challenged Scotland’s Directors to think about the IPCC code red: “the costs of inaction on climate change are greater than the cost of action.  There needs to be a bias towards change rather than a bias against it.”  

The same is true of diversity of thought.  The benefits are widely known and there are costs to inaction.  It's time for Scotland’s top business and investment leaders to bring more breadth to their squad and champion change.

This piece was originally published in The Times on 6th September.

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Blog: The new Parliament is not business as usual

With sanitiser stations, record postal votes and social distancing stretching queues to vote long into the distance, the Scottish Parliament 2021 election was very much not business as usual. The next term of Parliament won’t be either.

Blog by Lucy Higginson, David Hume Institute

May 2021

With sanitiser stations, record postal votes and social distancing stretching queues to vote long into the distance, the Scottish Parliament 2021 election was very much not business as usual. The next term of Parliament won’t be either.

The 2021 Scottish Parliament election was billed as being one of the most diverse yet. History was made twice in Glasgow with Pam Duncan-Glancy being the first wheelchair user and Kaukab Stewart and Pam Gosal being the first two women of colour to be elected to the Scottish Parliament. Also striking was the number of international perspectives from candidates who had left Scotland as young children but returned to settle as adults.  

Pam Duncan-Glancy’s 45-minute wait outside of the counting hall when security didn’t believe that she was a candidate brought home the level of change still needed.  In the last session, Jeremy Balfour was the only MSP with a physical disability.  Pam, Jeremy and Kaukab are trailblazers but Parliament is still not representative of wider society. 

In our 2020 analysis of Scottish Parliament less than 2% of MSPs were from a minority ethnic background and of these, all were educated at fee-paying schools. As we analyse the 2021 intake there is a shift, but there is still more to do. 

There is other good news: turnout and engagement in the election was high. There were big changes at Holyrood this year as a number of longstanding MSPs stood down. Many of their replacements only entered politics in recent years and come with a wide range of life experience which will help add to diversity of thought.

As we welcome new and returning MSPs, Scotland must unite to build forward better from the pandemic. Our latest research shows that 3 in 4 people want to take action by being kinder to one another. People are helping neighbours and making more conscious choices with money. Through research conversations apathy with politics and constitutional arguments was passionately voiced. Despite that apathy, high turnout in this election shows high engagement.

Community featured strongly in acceptance speeches, along with sign language from one candidate to send a message to her dad. Listening and learning from the communities they serve will be critical for politicians of all persuasions and they will need to work together for Scotland’s future.

As we emerge from Covid, it leaves us with stark inequalities. Diversity of thought will be critical to recovery.  New decision makers at Holyrood are an indication of progress but much, much more needs to be done for Scotland’s economy to benefit from increasing diversity in the labour market and wider society. There is a clear link between high levels of equality and high productivity in countries like Denmark and this should not be ignored.

We will be publishing a full briefing on diversity in the Scottish Parliament later in the week, once all the data is analysed. (Update: read the briefing here).

Image credit: sharing thumbnail image - photo by Chris Flexen free from Unsplash on 08.05.2021.

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