Accenture scraps global diversity and inclusion goals

Company joins Meta, Alphabet and Amazon in rolling back DEI initiatives following Trump’s return to US presidency

Accenture chief executive Julie Sweet said the policy change followed an 'evaluation of our internal policies and practices and the evolving landscape in the United States, including recent executive orders with which we must comply'. Photograph: Gavin John/Bloomberg
Accenture chief executive Julie Sweet said the policy change followed an 'evaluation of our internal policies and practices and the evolving landscape in the United States, including recent executive orders with which we must comply'. Photograph: Gavin John/Bloomberg

Accenture has scrapped its global diversity and inclusion goals after an evaluation of the changing US political landscape, according an internal memo seen by Reuters.

The company will start “sunsetting” the diversity goals it set in 2017, along with career development programmes for “people of specific demographic groups”, said the memo from chief executive Julie Sweet.

Big Tech companies Meta, Alphabet and Amazon are among a series of firms that had scrapped their Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) goals leading up to and after Republican Donald Trump’s return to the US presidency.

Ms Sweet said Accenture’s policy change followed an “evaluation of our internal policies and practices and the evolving landscape in the United States, including recent executive orders with which we must comply”.

READ MORE

Since taking office on January 20, Mr Trump has issued a number of executive orders aimed at dismantling DEI programmes across the federal government and the private sector.

Moves by Meta and Amazon to drop diversity programmes in US unlikely to affect IrelandOpens in new window ]

Along with rolling back Accenture’s DEI targets – which Ms Sweet said would no longer be used to measure staff performance – the company will pause submitting data to external diversity benchmarking surveys, the memo said.

It would also evaluate external partnerships on the topic “as part of refreshing our talent strategy”, Ms Sweet said in the memo.

In line with goals set in 2017 and 2020, women make up 48 per cent of Accenture’s workforce and 30 per cent of managing director roles, according to its latest annual report.

The company, which hires extensively from India, had also announced race and ethnicity goals for the US and the UK in 2020.

The Financial Times was the first to report the development. – Reuters.