![Women are on track to occupy 30 per cent of boardroom seats by the end of 2018.](/web/20160924012948im_/http://www.theage.com.au/content/dam/images/g/r/j/v/8/7/image.related.landscape.460x307.grj93o.png/1474336585474.jpg)
Two more companies join blacklist of 'female-free' boardrooms
Women are on track to occupy 30 per cent of boardroom seats by the end of 2018, but 22 companies remain complete female-free zones.
Jessica Irvine has been writing about economics for Fairfax since 2005, including a two-year stint in the Canberra Press Gallery. She has an honours degree in Economics (Social Sciences) from the University of Sydney. Her first book Zombies, bananas and why there are no economists in heaven: The economics of real life is available as an ebook and in hard copy
Women are on track to occupy 30 per cent of boardroom seats by the end of 2018, but 22 companies remain complete female-free zones.
The man responsible for managing the nation's credit card says a credit downgrade would have "little to no" impact on the government's cost of borrowing.
Turn that frown upside down: the Aussie economy is showing flickering signs of life.
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