If
Janet Yellen becomes head of the Federal Reserve, as she is expected to
in January, she will become one of the most powerful women in the
world. But who are the others?
Yellen
will be the first woman to head the mighty US Federal Reserve if she
takes over at the central bank in January. Her job will be to maintain
the stuttering recovery of the world's largest economy. Yellen is an
expert on the causes and impact of unemployment and is regarded as
an economic "dove"
who will stick with current chairman Ben Bernanke's massive support
programme for the economy. Yellen first joined the Fed in 1977 but left
in 1978 to lecture at the London School of Economics with her
Nobel-winning economist husband George Akerlof. She has straddled
academia and public office since and advised Bill Clinton for two years
of his presidency. Her appointment as the Fed's vice chairwoman in 2010
set her up to succeed Bernanke.
List Of World Most Powerful Women
Indra Nooyi, chair and chief executive of PepsiCo
Tough operator … Indra Nooyi. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images
Nooyi has proved herself a tough operator leading PepsiCo – the world's second biggest food and drinks business –
for the last seven years. Two years ago there was pressure for her to stand down but she held on and increased sales. In July, she
faced down activist investor Nelson Peltz,
who was applying pressure for Pepsi to split its drinks business off
from the more successful snacks arm. Nooyi, 57, was born and educated in
India. After various strategy and consulting jobs, and postgraduate
study at Yale, she joined Pepsi in 1994, aged 29. By 2001 she was chief
financial officer, running the group's strategy and overseeing purchases
of Tropicana and Quaker Oats Co on her way to the top job.
Economy drive … Gina Rinehart. Photograph: Ron D'Raine/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Gina Rinehart's $17bn fortune appreciates by about $1bn every year,
which makes her Australia's richest person and one of the wealthiest
women in the world. Still, last year she felt able to urge Australians
to
work for $2 a day. She has also made the news as a result of a
legal battle with three of her four children,
who she cut out of the family trust. Rinehart, 59, left the University
of Sydney after a year after finding a leftwing economics lecturer and
fellow students
not to her taste.
Instead, she returned to her native Perth to work at Hancock
Prospecting, the mining business owned by her father, Lang. Despite
hitting the headlines, Rinehart has generally shunned the press, yet she
has bought stakes in media businesses Channel 10 and Fairfax.
Janet Yellen Tops List Of World Most Powerful Women
Strong state presence … Dilma Rousseff. Photograph: Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images
Hardly a household name – even in Brazil – for much of her career,
Dilma Rousseff, a career civil servant who had never so much as run for
elected office, has become the first woman president of the world's
sixth-largest economy in 2011. A former 1960s revolutionary who spent
three years in jail and
was reportedly tortured,
she joined President Lula da Silva's government in 2003 as energy
minister and two years later was made his chief of staff (during her
election campaign, Lula helpfully dubbed her "mother of the nation").
Brusque and short-tempered, the 66-year-old is known to favour a strong
state presence in key areas including oil, energy and banking . She has
also pledged to fight corruption and invest more in transport, health
and education following mass street protests earlier this year that
revealed how Brazil's boom has failed to improve the lives of many
ordinary citizens. She is not afraid to take on the big guns, either,
berating the US at the United Nations and
postponing a visit to Washington over the recent NSA spying revelations.
Safe pair of hands … Christine Lagarde. Photograph: Alastair Grant/Reuters
After the downfall of Dominique Strauss-Kahn, in 2011 Lagarde became
the first woman to head the International Monetary Fund. She was plunged
straight into fighting the eurozone's sovereign debt crisis. Lagarde,
57, was a labour and competition lawyer at Baker & McKenzie for more
than 20 years, rising to become the firm's first female chairman. After
a spell as French trade minister she became the first woman to head
France's economic ministry. Lagarde was elected as a safe pair of hands
at the IMF but caused outrage when she told the Guardian that Greek
citizens were going through
payback time for not paying their taxes. A run at the French presidency could be next.
'Glass ceiling cracker' … Hillary Clinton. Photograph: Benjamin J Myers/Corbis
"Wife, mom, lawyer, women & kids advocate," begins
Hillary Rodham Clinton's Twitter profile,
before continuing: "FLOAR [First Lady of Arkansas], FLOTUS [First Lady
of the United States], Senator, SecState, author, dog owner, hair icon,
pantsuit aficionado, glass ceiling cracker" and concluding, coyly, "TBD
…" [To Be Determined]. It's the last bit that everyone is interested in:
will the 56-year-old, Yale-educated lawyer be the Democrats' 2016
presidential candidate? Clinton, who in 2008 won more primaries and
delegates than any other woman candidate in US history, has said only
that she will start thinking about it "
some time next year".
Polls suggest that if she does run, 65% of Democrats would vote for her
and she would beat the two current Republican frontrunners to become
the first woman president of the US. In the meantime, now a fully
private citizen for the first time in 30 years, she says she is mostly
at home with husband Bill "laughing at our dogs, watching stupid movies,
taking long walks." Of course.
Risk-averse … Angela Merkel. Photograph: Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis
One of only two EU leaders to have survived the economic crisis,
Angela Merkel is on course to become Europe's longest-serving elected
female head of government after romping home for the third time as
Germany's chancellor last month. A quantum physicist by training, the
59-year-old has
little style, less charisma, no apparent ideology and a marked aversion to risk in all its forms: her job, she has said, is "to advance,
even if only by a few centimetres,
and solve problems". But behind her motherly aura (not for nothing do
Germans call her "Mutti") and solid stewardship of Europe's largest
economy in a time of crisis is a ruthless politician who has seen off
all challengers within her own CDU party and consistently outmanoeuvred
the opposition. Merkel dodges confrontation, never shows her hand, and
always wins.
Melinda Gates, co-chair, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Melinda Gates, co-founder and co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Photograph: Stuart Isett/Polaris
As co-chair of The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Melinda Gates and her husband Bill –
the richest man in the world – hold the purse strings to an
endowment of $38.3bn. The foundation is best known for its work fighting diseases, including malaria and
polio, and for speaking out on sensitive subjects, such as birth control,
a tricky topic given Gates' own Catholic faith.
Having studied for a BA and an MBA at Duke University, Gates joined
Microsoft as a product developer in 1987. She met Bill the same year,
married him in 1994 and left the company in 1996 to raise the couple's
three children,
before becoming increasingly involved with philanthropy. Though the family's public mission to save the world is
not without controversy,
Gates herself is widely regarded as a thoughtful campaigner who works
methodically to drive change without seeking the limelight.
Park Geun-hye, president of South Korea
Gracious but tough … Park Geun-hye. Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images
The daughter of the strongman who ruled South Korea for much of the
1960s and 1970s, Park Geun-hye was inaugurated as the east Asian
powerhouse's
first woman president in February.
Five times an MP, the 60-year old conservative had earlier served as
her father Park Chung-hee's de facto first lady after her mother, Yuk
Young-soo, was killed by a sniper's bullet intended for the president
(who was himself killed five years later by his own intelligence chief
in 1979). Gracious but tough (
she once continued campaigning after requiring 60 stitches following a knife attack),
Park, who has devoted herself to her father's legacy and never married,
says one of her key priorities will be repairing the country's vitally
important relations with North Korea. Some are optimistic for the cause
of women following Park's election in a country which, despite its
advanced economy, ranks only 108 out of 135 for gender equality. Others
fear she is merely the latest in a line of prominent Asian daughters and
widows
of powerful fathers or husbands.
Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer, Facebook
'Pretty shocking' … Sheryl Sandberg. Photograph: Robert Gumpert for the Guardian
Sandberg divided
opinion earlier this year
with Lean In, her book of advice for women in business. Some criticised
her for patronising readers but it sold 150,000 copies in its first
week. Sandberg, 44, negotiated a stake in Facebook and became the first
woman on the company's board when she joined four years ago from Google.
Since Facebook's flotation last year she has been worth about $400m.
Sandberg's contacts span business and politics – she was chief of staff
to US Treasury secretary Larry Summers from 1996 to 2001. But she hasn't
always been so ambitious. After graduating from Harvard she moved to
Washington DC to find an eligible husband, married at 24 and divorced a
year later.
"Pretty shocking," she told the Guardian.
List Of World Most Powerful Women
0 comments:
Post a Comment