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Google's U.S. Workforce Grew More Asian, Less White and Male

White workers remain in the majority in Google, accounting for 54.4 percent of employees.

Google's U.S. Workforce Grew More Asian, Less White and Male
Signage is displayed at the Google Inc. offices in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Google’s workforce employed fewer white, male employees in 2018 compared with 2017, as the Asian workforce grew and women and people of color showed less obvious improvement.

Gains were reported in the number of women, black and Latino workers among new hires, and attrition rates for women and most under-represented groups declined, the Alphabet Inc. unit said in its annual diversity report. Still, black workers continued to have the highest attrition rates, according to the report, which cited race data for U.S. employees.

White workers remain in the majority, accounting for 54.4 percent of employees. Asian staff posted the biggest increase, rising 1.7 percentage points to make up 39.8 percent of Googlers.

Earlier this year, Google employees, along with shareholders, called on the company to make changes in areas including racial and gender diversity, and asked the board to consider tying these metrics to executive bonuses. Over the past year, employees have protested about worker rights, a military contract and the handling of sexual misconduct allegations.

Google's U.S. Workforce Grew More Asian, Less White and Male

The report showed women gained ground in technical jobs, although they still account for less than a quarter of those roles globally compared with almost half of non-technical positions. Women made up 26 percent of U.S. leadership, from 25.3 percent in 2018.

For the first time, the company also asked workers to identify themselves in other ways. Google found that 8.5 percent identify as LGBTQ, 7.5 percent identified as having a disability, and less than 1 percent identified their gender as non-binary.

The over-representation of Asian workers and under-representation of women relative to the broader U.S. population is common in the tech industry. Last month recruiter Stellares released an analysis of 13,000 tech companies that identified a compounding factor: The initial profile of the founders tends to set the pattern for the company, even as it matures.

For example, companies with all-male founding teams, about 14 percent of leadership positions are held by women. At those started by all-female teams, the split is about even, the study found.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Green in Southfield, Michigan at jgreen16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Janet Paskin at jpaskin@bloomberg.net, Jodi Schneider, Robert Fenner

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.