Gender parity

The Number of Women in Full-time MBA Programs Continues to Grow

According to a Forté Foundation analysis, the number of women matriculating to full-time MBA programs continues to grow. In 2022, among the 56 members of the Forte Foundation coalition, women’s enrollment averaged 41.4 percent, up slightly from 41.2 percent in 2021. This is an increase of almost ten percentage points from 2011. Two full-time MBA programs achieved gender parity: Johns Hopkins’ Carey and University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton. And, an increasing number of programs came close; in 2022, 17 programs enrolled at least 45 percent women (see list below), up from 10 the year before. There were zero in 2012. 

“It’s exciting and gratifying to see the impact of our efforts over the last two decades to close the gender parity gap in MBA programs,” Elissa Sangster, Forté’s CEO, told Bizwomen, an online business journal. “More women today understand the opportunities an MBA offers and our work has helped build the pipeline of young women interested in business careers and advancing to leadership,” she said.

Full-time MBA programs where women’s enrollment reached at least 45 percent in 2022: 

Johns Hopkins University (Carey): 52 percent

University of Pennsylvania (Wharton): 50 percent

Southern Methodist University (Cox): 48 percent

Duke University (Fuqua): 48 percent

Northwestern University (Kellogg): 48 percent

Oxford University (Saïd): 48 percent

Washington University in St. Louis (Olin): 47 percent

University of Cambridge (Judge): 47 percent

George Washington University: 47 percent

University of California-Berkeley (Haas): 46 percent

Harvard Business School: 46 percent

University of Southern California (Marshall): 46 percent

MIT (Sloan): 46 percent

New York University (Stern): 45 percent

Alliance Manchester School of Business: 45 percent

Dartmouth College (Tuck): 45 percent

Columbia University: 45 percent

Financial Times Post-MBA Salary Analysis Shows Gender Pay Gap is Declining

A gender pay gap still exists for MBA graduates, but it appears to be shrinking. This is according to a recently released Financial Times analysis. Using data collected through the FT Global MBA Rankings, which collects salary and position information for MBA alumni three years post-graduation, the FT was able to analyze pay equity trends among graduates of ranked MBA programs. The findings indicate that the gender-based pay gap has generally been in decline, with some volatility, since 2007. 

The pay disparity among 2022 MBA alumni three-years post-graduation is eight percent. Men earn a median base salary of $137,000, and women earn $126,422. This compares favorably to the 16 percent pay gap for MBA alumni in 2007, which is the first year the gap started to decline more consistently. Moreover, for the 2022 alumni, the MBA played a role in decreasing the gender pay gap; among this group, the pre-MBA pay gap was ten percent, two percentage points higher than post-degree. Conversely, for 2006 MBA alumni the pre-MBA pay gap totaled 11 percent, and then increased to 16 percent post-MBA.

The Financial Times noted that the decrease in the pay gap can be attributed to women receiving higher base salaries in recent years. In fact, for four of the past seven years—2016, 2017, 2020 and 2021—female graduates have received larger salary increases than males. The analysis also points out that these four years are the only years between 2006 and 2022 that women MBA salaries increased more quickly than did men’s salaries. Generally, however, both male and female salaries are now increasing at similar rates. 

Other key findings include:

  • On average, male MBA alumni have risen more quickly and to more senior positions than females every year since 2006.

  • Male MBA graduates, in both 2007 and 2022, disproportionately pursued careers in higher-paying fields—finance, consulting, and technology—compared to female graduates. The proportion of women in consulting and technology roles, however, has increased between 2007 and 2022.

  • Men and women report the same primary motivations for entering into MBA programs: career and management opportunities, and increased salary. This has remained consistent over time.

  • The proportion of MBA alumni, men and women, who feel that they have achieved their goals is similar, particularly for career opportunities. But men are slightly more likely to say that they achieved an increased salary or secured a management role. 

Wharton Announces First Full-Time MBA Class in which Women Comprise the Majority

The Wharton School has become the first of the “magnificent seven” (M7) to announce, within its newest full-time MBA class, that more women gained admission than men. Women make up 52 percent of Wharton’s incoming class, which is the largest proportion in the storied program’s 140-year history and a large uptick from 41 percent the previous year. The remaining M7 schools have yet to release data on their incoming classes, but last year, the highest percentages of women were found at Harvard Business School (44 percent) and Stanford’s Graduate School of Business (47 percent). 

While women now make up the majority in both law and medical schools, parity has been harder to achieve within MBA programs. However, according to the Forté Foundation, a non-profit that promotes gender parity in business, the number of women in business school has steadily increased over the last 15 years. Forté has tracked female enrollment in about 50 full-time domestic MBA programs, and notes that while women made up only 30 percent of the total in 2005, that number increased to 39 percent in 2020. Also in 2020, a record-high 22 MBA programs enrolled classes that were over 40 percent women.

Is this a trend or an anomaly due to the effects of the pandemic on women in the workforce? Business schools saw a large uptick in applications as a result of the pandemic. And while the number of applicants from both sexes increased, according to the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC), full-time MBA programs reported a 62 percent increase in applications from female students in 2020 compared to a 42 percent increase in 2019

Women, historically, have been more interested in seeking their MBA through hybrid and flexible models and the 2021 GMAC Prospective Students Survey showed that women reported a greater openness towards the hybrid learning models necessitated by the pandemic. Women were more willing to complete their degree online; 60 percent of U.S.-based women said that they were willing to complete more than 30 percent of their MBA degree online compared to just 52 percent of men. Similarly, women were more likely to agree that “career opportunities gained through an on-campus graduate business degree are the same as gained through an online degree” whereas men were more likely to strongly disagree (24 percent). 

While more data will be necessary to determine if the uptick in women applicants and matriculants is more than a response to a moment in history, there is room for optimism about the changes underway. Elissa Sangster, Forté Foundation’s CEO, expressed her pleasure that the pandemic didn’t deter women from seeking an MBA. “So many of our schools are hitting that 40 percent mark and heading north of it,” she says. “That’s going to change the dynamic already in business school and change the access point for women.”