The State of Latinas in Corporate America 2024
Introduction
Latinas lose the most ground across the corporate pipeline
The last five years of Lean In’s research on the state of women at work reveal a disturbing trend: Latinas face the steepest climb up the corporate ladder and end up the most underrepresented of all groups of employees in the C-suite. Despite these barriers, Latinas remain highly ambitious and increasingly committed to advancing.
Lean In’s first-ever report on the state of Latinas in corporate America offers an in-depth look at the distinct, compounding obstacles Latinas face at work. It also provides specific actions companies can take to ensure Latinas are given equal opportunities to grow, develop, and lead their organizations into the future.
Latinas face the biggest drop in representation from entry level to the C-suite
Latinas enter the corporate workforce at a disadvantage. There are roughly half as many Latinas at the entry level as in the general population: Latinas make up over 9 percent of the population but just under 5 percent of entry-level workers.1 This scarcity of Latinas at the entry level makes them the most underrepresented of any group of women at the beginning of their careers.
From there, Latinas face the steepest climb up the corporate ladder—or the biggest drop in representation from entry level to the C-suite.2 As a result, they end up the least represented at the top: only 1 percent of C-suite executives are Latina.
If this trend continues, they will not be able to catch up to other groups of women—let alone men—in leadership roles and will remain the most underrepresented group at the highest levels of corporate America.