(Bloomberg) -- A record 18% of chief executive officers were replaced last year, with more top executives forced out for ethical lapses than were fired for poor performance or disagreements with their boards, according to a PwC study released Wednesday.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
In a year dominated with revelations about harassment and other behavioral miscues, about 39% of the top executives dismissed had been accused of ethical lapses, according to the PwC study of turnover among the top 2,500 global public companies. It was the first time ethical lapses led the causes of CEO turnover in the study’s 19-year history.
The analysis also found that the share of incoming female CEOs dipped to 4.9%, off the record pace of 6% in 2017.
©2019 Bloomberg L.P.