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Page 6 - Alison Rose Review News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Liontrust and AJ Bell flagged for all-male executive teams in Hampton-Alexander review

Women on boards As previously mentioned, 36.2% or 68 of the FTSE 100 index companies have now met or exceeded the 33% target, up from 32.4% in 2019. This encompasses 374 women on FTSE 100 boards out of a total of 1,032 directorships, with 34 women in either the chair and senior independent director role. The review noted companies such as St James’s Place, Tio Tinto and Smiths Group “substantially” increased the representation of women on boards in the final year, while M&G was also included in  the top ten companies that had 50% gender balance on the board. “The key drivers of progress are the turnover rate and the appointment rate of women, both of which have increased by around 4% this year and are at the highest yet,” the review said. “In particular, the appointment rate of 39% is helping fuel faster progress. The number of women in chair and senior independent director roles continues to increase, with three more women to take up chair roles in the coming month

Bank makes £100 million available for Scottish businesses led by women

Bank makes £100 million available for Scottish businesses led by women © SYSTEM Royal Bank of Scotland chief executive Alison Rose Royal Bank of Scotland has announced an additional £100 million to help support Scottish female entrepreneurs recover from Covid-19. The funds, made available over the next four years, have the aim of helping female-led businesses scale and grow. In January, the bank announced a £1 billion programme to help female entrepreneurship following the findings of the Alison Rose Review of Female Entrepreneurship. The extraordinary impacts of coronavirus has seen unprecedented demand for access to the funding. © DC Thomson It exceed its initial UK target four years ahead of plan.

Covid rates relief to be extended in Scotland

One hundred percent rates relief in Scotland for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses is set to be extended for a minimum of three months, the country s Finance Secretery has said. Delivering the draft Scottish budget this afternoon, Kate Forbes also confirmed continuing commitment to Covid business support, and no further changes on income tax. Rates relief to ease the burden on businesses forced to close during the pandemic had been set to expire at the end of March. Any continuation beyond this latest three-month extension will depend on whether the UK Budget on March 3 triggers spending consequentials in this area.

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