Connect2Canada Logo

How to Build Back Better Through the Lens of Gender Equity

Share This:

April 5, 2021

Honourable Mary Ng, Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade, Elisabeth Moreno, France’s Minister Delegate for Gender Equality, Diversity and Equal Opportunities and Marie-Josée Kravis, Chair of the Economic Club of New York

As we enter the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic, its inequitable burden is clearer than ever, with the negative economic impacts disproportionally affecting women. Greater job losses in female-dominated sectors, combined with expectations that women shoulder greater childcare responsibilities, have resulted in many women dropping out of the labor force entirely. When Prime Minister Trudeau and President Biden convened in February 2021 to craft the Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership, they committed to ensuring that women are not left behind by COVID-19, including by addressing the “she-cession” caused by the pandemic.

It was with this challenge in mind that the virtual 2021 Women in Business Conference gathered together more than 150 business leaders, government officials, and entrepreneurs from Canada, the United States and France for a half-day conference in March, focused on the systemic role the public and private sectors can play in accelerating gender parity in the workplace. This was the third iteration of the Women in Business conference, a partnership between the Consulates General of France and Canada in New York, and The Economic Club of New York.

The first session included the Honourable Mary Ng, Canada’s Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade, in conversation with Élisabeth Moreno, France’s Minister for Gender Equality, Diversity and Equal Opportunity, discussing their respective governments’ recovery plans. Minister Ng highlighted Canada’s feminist response to COVID-19, the government’s continued support for women entrepreneurs, as well as the importance of countries working together to achieve progress on gender equity.

Other panels, featuring luminaries such as Jane Fraser, CEO at Citigroup, Mary Barra, CEO and Chairman at General Motors, and Sara Eisen, Co-Anchor of CNBC’s “Closing Bell”, discussed how the crisis is threatening the pipeline of women leaders and potentially reversing progress that has already been made, as well as how we can use this crisis as an opportunity for genuine change in diversity, equity and inclusion. Full recordings of all four sessions are available here.

Associated Links: