Bias in Senior Role Hiring Against Ethnic Minorities Intensifies

King’s College London

Major 'resumé' study the first to focus on senior roles

Two men sitting across a table in the sunshine

A major study by Dr Mladen Adamovic, Senior Lecturer in Cross-Cultural Management, and Dr Andreas Leibbrandt, Professor in Economics (Monash University), found that discrimination against ethnic minorities at the very first stage of recruitment for leadership roles is even more pronounced than that experienced with non-leadership roles.

The study found that applications for leadership roles that were submitted with English-sounding names were twice as likely to receive a positive response than those submitted with non-English names.

Dr Adamovic's study, conducted in Australia, submitted over 12,000 job applications in response to more than 4,000 job advertisements. The applications used nearly identical resumés for fictional candidates, with the names altered to represent different ethnic groups. This 'resumé study' was the first to include leadership roles (such as management, team leader, and frontline leader positions) in its investigation of ethnic discrimination. 

It examined six distinct ethnic groups to reflect Arabic, Australian Aboriginal, Chinese, English, Greek, and Indian backgrounds. The applications targeted jobs advertised in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, across 12 different occupations.

For leadership roles, 26.8% of applications submitted with English names received positive responses, while only 11.3% of those with non-English names received positive responses.

For non-leadership roles, 21.2% of applications with English names received positive responses, while 11.6% of applications with non-English names received positive responses.

These results suggest that recruiters are more likely to perceive applicants with English names than those from ethnic minorities as potential leaders.

Ethnic discrimination for leadership positions was higher still when the jobs required customer contact. For these customer-oriented jobs, 30.6 percent of job applications with English names received positive responses, while only 11.1 percent of applications with non-English names received positive responses.

In contrast, ethnic discrimination in recruitment was not influenced by the city, the sex of job applicants, or the types of attributes such as learning, creativity, and innovation required for the role.

As well as violating anti-discrimination laws, businesses that are consciously or unconsciously rejecting people based on their name and not their qualifications and experience are reducing their chances of finding the right person for the role. It's clear that they need to look seriously at ways to reduce bias right from the first sift of applications.

Dr Mladen Adamovic, Senior Lecturer in Cross-Cultural Management

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MladenAdamovic-2022

Senior Lecturer in Cross-Cultural Management

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