Video: Secretary Clinton at International Council on Women's Business Leadership
Inaugural Meeting
of the International Council on Women's Business Leadership
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton Secretary of State
Ben Franklin Room
Washington, DC
January
24, 2012
Well, good morning everyone. And let me again welcome you here to the State
Department, to the Ben Franklin Room, for this first meeting of the
International Council on Women’s Business Leadership. This is a truly
remarkable group, and I want to thank each and every one of you for taking time
out of your very busy schedules to travel here to share your experiences and
your insights as to what more we can do to promote women in the ranks of
business and provide more opportunities for them to participate.
I want, particularly, to thank our vice chair, Cherie Booth Blair. We’ve
worked together on so many challenges over the years. Her foundation supports
women entrepreneurs around the world, and I’ve had an opportunity to
collaborate with her and the foundation on the mWomen initiative to close the
global gender gap that prevents hundreds of millions of women from gaining
access to mobile technology. We all know that when women have the tools to
participate in the formal economy, when they have access to information and
opportunity, they can be full participants.
Our other vice chair, Indra Nooyi, unfortunately could not be here.
Something came up which prevented her from attending. But her leadership at
PepsiCo is a model for entrepreneurs and executives around the world, and she
has been closely involved in helping to organize this meeting, and I think she
twisted a few arms of some of you to participate as well.
Valerie Jarrett, President Obama’s special advisor, also asked that we send
her regrets. The President’s delivering his State of the Union this evening,
and she was not able to break free from that, something I totally understand
from my prior life. And I think that we’re very fortunate to have such a good
turnout today.
I only want to say a few words, because really, the point of bringing such
distinguished, successful women here around this table is to hear from you and
to get very specific ideas about what you think can help us boost growth, take
some of the untapped resources and mobilize them, follow smart strategies to
increase productivity, and add new value to companies and economies. Now,
everyone is searching for answers to those questions, but not enough people
realize that part of the answer, a large part of the answer, lies with women.
Last September, I delivered a speech in San Francisco at the APEC, the
Asia-Pacific economic conference lead-up, to make the case for increasing
women’s participation in the global economy. You know from your own experiences
that when women enjoy greater access and opportunity, there is a ripple effect.
Businesses have more consumers, families have more to spend, and so it goes
through the economy.
We have people around this table who have devoted their professional lives
to unlocking the answers to these questions. Sri Mulyani here from the World Bank
– she can tell us, in first-person detail, about how the Bank has released a
new report, which I commend to all of you, about the impact women can have, not
just for themselves and their families, something we’ve always known, but for
entire economies. If women participated fully even in our own country, our GDP
would rise considerably, and that is even more true in many other parts of the
world.
The State Department has another advisory council whose subcommittee on
women has produced a new report that looks specifically at the impact of women
business leaders on companies and organizations. I want to thank its co-chairs,
Judith Barnett and Jeff Volk, who are right there, for their leadership. Now,
we’ll have the full results soon, but one fact is already clear: Including more
women at the top of organizations, businesses, and the public sector is not
just the right thing to do; it is the smart thing to do. It’s good for
business. It’s good for results.
Now, we all know the numbers. About three percent of the CEOs of Fortune
Global 500 companies are women. There are still a lot of obstacles to women
entering. It depends, of course, on national, cultural, ethnic, religious
reasons. But it cuts across all of that, and it is, to a greater or lesser
degree, present in every society.
So the challenge before us today as we represent government, business, NGOs,
workers, institutions is what are the ideas that we can promote that can help
women be able to fulfill their own potential. How do we widen that circle of
prosperity which will lift the entire global economy – women and men alike –
and how do we, within our own organizations, do more to train and promote women
to positions of leadership?
I’m looking forward to hearing your ideas, your initiatives, your thoughts,
and looking forward to working with you to try to implement them. So let me now
turn to my friend and fellow chair, Cherie.