A new report sheds light on the music industry's lack of racial diversity
In the US, white male executives outnumber Black women by nearly 18 to one
A new report has revealed the continuing racial disparities within the US music industry, looking at both boardrooms and charts.
The report comes after much of the industry pledged to rectify these disparities in response to last year’s protests.
The Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, part of The University of Southern California, revealed that when looking at 4,060 executives across 119 companies, Black women were outnumbered by white male executives by 17.7 to one - while just 13.9% of executives were from marginalised racial groups.
The report also notes that women were much less likely to be found in senior roles, and they were even less likely to be from underrepresented backgrounds.
Dr Stacy L Smith and Carmen Lee, the authors of the study, also noted that there was a large disparity between the charts and boardrooms.
“Underrepresented and Black artists are dominating the charts, but the C-suite [executive level] is a ‘diversity desert, the profile of top artists may give some in the industry the illusion that music is an inclusive business, but the numbers at the top tell a different story,” Smith notes.
More promising representation was found in A&R departments, which work on signing talent - 34% of A&R executives were from underrepresented backgrounds.
While Black artists were more likely to address racial imbalances, with 80% of their teams including at least one underrepresented or Black member - less than a quarter of white artists did the same.
The report notes that this places pressure on underrepresented groups to address diversity issues, while white artists fail to do the same.
“This leaves underrepresented and Black artists doing the work of inclusion for the entire industry, it’s time for the rest of the business, including white artists and executives, to ensure that the pool of underrepresented talent in these roles has access and opportunity across the entire ecosystem.” The report states.
You can read the full report here.
[Via: Guardian]