THE GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP, INC. | Gender and racial pay gaps at Goldman Sachs Asset Management

Status
30.02% votes in favour
AGM date
Previous AGM date
Proposal number
11
Resolution details
Company ticker
GS
Resolution ask
Report on or disclose
ESG theme
  • Social
ESG sub-theme
  • Diversity, equity & inclusion (DEI)
Type of vote
Shareholder proposal
Filer type
Shareholder
Company sector
Financials
Company HQ country
United States
Resolved clause
"RESOLVED: Shareholders request that the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (“Company”, “Goldman Sachs”, or “Goldman”) report annually on unadjusted median and adjusted pay gaps across race and gender globally, and include associated policy, reputational, competitive, and operational risks – including risks associated with recruiting and retaining diverse key talent. The report should be prepared at reasonable cost, and omit proprietary information, litigation strategy, and legal compliance information.
Ideally, annual reporting would integrate base, bonus, and equity compensation broken out by country, where appropriate, and further differentiate between gender and racial/minority/ethnicity groupings.
Racial/gender pay gaps are the difference between non-minority and minority/male and female median earnings expressed as a percentage of non-minority/male earnings."
Supporting statement
"SUPPORTING STATEMENT
Goldman Sachs has faced substantial scrutiny in recent years for gender pay discrimination, which culminated in a $215 million class-action settlement in May 2023.1 Ongoing pay inequities – which persist across both race and gender at Goldman – pose substantial risks to the Company. For instance, Black workers’ median annual earnings represent just 77% of white wages, while the median income for women working full-time is only 84% that of men. Considering race, Black women earn 76% and Latina women just 63%.2
At the current trajectory, White women will not reach pay equity until 2059 – three decades from now; Black women not until 2130 – a century from now; and Latina women not until 2224 – two full centuries from now.3
Citigroup estimates that had minority and gender wage gaps been closed 20 years ago, it would have contributed $12 trillion additional dollars to national income.
Studies link diversity in leadership and managing pay equity to superior stock performance as well as higher return on equity.4
Women and minorities clearly face structural bias regarding job opportunity and pay. At Goldman, underrepresented minorities represent 47.0% of the workforce but only 26.7% of executives. Women represent 42.9% of the workforce but only 25.1% of executives.
Best practice pay equity reporting consists of two parts:
1. Statistically adjusted gaps – which assess whether minorities and non-minorities (both men and women) are paid equally for similar roles.
2. Unadjusted median pay gaps – which assess equal opportunity for high paying roles.
Currently, Goldman reports neither adjusted nor unadjusted quantitative pay gaps. In contrast, roughly 50% of the nation’s top 100 companies report adjusted gaps, and an increasing number also disclose unadjusted gaps.5
Racial and gender unadjusted median pay gaps are accepted as the valid way to measure pay inequity by the United States Census Bureau, Department of Labor, OECD, and the International Labor Organization. The United Kingdom and Ireland legally mandate disclosure of median gender pay gaps.6
THEREFORE: Because gender and equity pay gaps are inherently unfair, because they have been shown to harm company performance, and because disparity continues to be a serious issue that plagues Goldman Sachs, please vote FOR this commonsense reporting proposal.
1 https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/09/business/dealbook/goldman-sachs-discrimination-lawsuit.html 
2 https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/income-poverty/cps-pinc/pinc-05.html - par_textimage_24 
3 https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5bc65db67d0c9102cca54b74/t/622f4567fae4ea772ae60492/ 1647265128087/Racial+Gender+Pay+Scorecard+2022+-+Arjuna+Capital.pdf 
4 Ibid. 
5 https://diversiq.com/which-sp-500-companies-disclose-gender-pay-equity-data/ 
6 https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5bc65db67d0c9102cca54b74/t/622f4567fae4ea772ae60492/ 1647265128087/Racial+Gender+Pay+Scorecard+2022+-+Arjuna+Capital.pdf"

How other organisations have declared their voting intentions

Organisation name Declared voting intentions Rationale
Anima Sgr For Investors would benefit from a report disclosing the adjusted and unadjusted median pay gap data for the company’s global workforce as a means to more fully assess the company's progress towards reducing pay inequities and mitigating related risks.

DISCLAIMER: By including a shareholder resolution or management proposal in this database, neither the PRI nor the sponsor of the resolution or proposal is seeking authority to act as proxy for any shareholder; shareholders should vote their proxies in accordance with their own policies and requirements.

Any voting recommendations set forth in the descriptions of the resolutions and management proposals included in this database are made by the sponsors of those resolutions and proposals, and do not represent the views of the PRI.

Information on the shareholder resolutions, management proposals and votes in this database have been obtained from sources that are believed to be reliable, but the PRI does not represent that it is accurate, complete, or up-to-date, including information relating to resolutions and management proposals, other signatories’ vote pre-declarations (including voting rationales), or the current status of a resolution or proposal. You should consult companies’ proxy statements for complete information on all matters to be voted on at a meeting.