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Who are you? Finance finally asks staff for data to boost diversity

Companies ramp up efforts to collect information on their workers in order to set targets for inclusiveness

Chairs in Kunsthal Museum Rotterdam.
Chairs in Kunsthal Museum Rotterdam. Photo: Getty Images

When a graduate joins EY, one of the first things the consultancy asks them to do is to tick a raft of little boxes indicating whether they were the first in their family to go to university, whether they are from an ethnic minority, if they are transgender or if they are a carer.

By law, the company cannot compel staff to provide this information, but, as they tell new recruits, they are not simply being nosy.

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